Neo-Nazis have filmed themselves defacing a Jewish monument in Cannon Hill park, Birmingham – draping a swastika flag and hate slogans over it.

The extremists from sinister pro-Hitler hate group National Action also smeared anti-Jewish graffiti onto the park gates.

West Midlands Police are now investigating the attack after a video emerged last week on online video-sharing site YouTube.

It was uploaded from an account linked to National Action, a fascist youth group said to have previously been under investigation by anti-terrorism cops.

The video shows figures spray-painting a Jewish Star of David onto the park gates, with the caption “bankers” and ”1%”before they climb a menorah, a seven-branched candle stand used in Jewish worship.

One per cent of the German population was Jewish before the Holocaust.

The men are then seen hanging a Third Reich swastika flag and a billboard with National Action’s logo to the menorah.

The vandals have their faces blurred throughout the video and are wearing latex-gloves to avoid leaving behind fingerprints.

The large menorah, maintained by the Lubavitch Jewish community, has been a popular attraction in the park for years and is lit during Jewish festivals.

Maggie Suissa, campaigns director for the Union of Jewish Students, urged police to find those responsible. She said: “It’s disgusting but dishearteningly this isn’t surprising. Jewish people need reassurance, genuine security and the promise from counter terrorism that this group will not continue to get away with spreading their Nazi hatred.”

National Action has reportedly been viewed by Scotland Yard as a potential threat to National Security. Its ‘official strategy’ documents feature photos of a smiling Adolf Hitler and masked activists performing Nazi salutes.

The group has previously described itself as “the fascists your nan warned you about.”

A previous investigation by the Daily Mirror revealed that National Action was sending its members to paramilitary bootcamps, featuring knife fighting lessons. The camps were run by a fascist fanatic who boasted of building a “new SS” and who was planning to show recruits training videos from the Islamic State.

After the January attacks on French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo by Jihadist extremists, National Action released a photoshopped image of murdered chief editor Stephane Charbonnier with the caption “like and share if you think this f***** got what he deserved”.

National Action posters are said to have been found at a dozen UK universities and one alleged leader quit Warwick University after being named in a national newspaper.

The group demonstrated at Nelson Mandela’s statue in London last year and also draped a banner with the slogan, “Anti-Racist is a Codeword for Anti-White” over a bridge in Birmingham.

Inspector Rachel Crump, of West Midlands Police, said: “We are aware of a video on YouTube which appears to show religiously aggravated vandalism in Cannon Hill Park.

“We take reports of hate crime extremely seriously and would urge anyone with information which would help us identify the people in the images to contact police on 101 or the independent charity Crimestoppers anonymously on 0800 555 111.”

Source: Birmingham Mail