Tommy Robinson has been banned from Snapchat after posting a video telling his followers the 'Czech Republic has no terror attacks because there are no Muslims.'

The 36-year-old far right activist made the inflammatory claims on social media last night during a visit to the country - which is home to around 20,000 Muslims.

Robinson - whose real name is Stephen Yaxley-Lennon - has now been banned from the app, while a conference he was due to speak at at the Czech government has been cancelled.

Facebook and Twitter have both banned him from their platforms after he repeatedly broke their hate speech rules and he has been told his account had been deleted by Snapchat for violating the site's terms of services.

Tommy Robinson has been banned from Snapchat after claiming, the 'Czech Republic has no terror attacks because there are no Muslims'

A statement to his website 'TR.news' said: 'This is insane, I'm banned from the world. None of these platforms has shown me what terms I breached and/or what posts were in breach.'

Robinson was supposed to speak today at a conference called 'Family and its rights in the 21st century' in the lower house of the Czech Parliament.

He was invited by one of the MPs from the ruling party ANO, but the event was met with a wave of criticism and has now been cancelled.

Earlier this year Czech pensioner Jaromir Balda, 71, felled trees to block railway lines and then pretended Islamists were responsible.

He left messages at the scene proclaiming 'Allahu Akbar' - or 'God is great' in Arabic. Two passenger trains hit the trees, but nobody was injured.

The far-right sympathiser, who said he hoped to spread fear of Muslim migrants, was jailed for four years for terrorism.

According to estimates, between 5,000 and 20,000 Muslims live in the Czech Republic, with 3,500 recorded in the 2010 census.

On Wednesday, Google faced accusations that it is fuelling hate after it refused to delete Robinson's official YouTube channel.

Google claimed that it had cracked down on the English Defence League founder by putting all of his videos behind a warning screen.

It also banned him from livestreaming, removed his videos from recommendations and barred other users from liking or commenting on his material.

However, it stopped short of removing them altogether despite mounting political pressure to do so.

The web giant is the last of the major tech firms to continue giving a platform to the far-right activist.

Earlier this year Czech pensioner Jaromir Balda, 71 (pictured), felled trees to block railway lines and then pretended Islamists were responsible. The far-right sympathiser, who said he hoped to spread fear of Muslim migrants, was jailed for four years for terrorism

But Google has allowed Yaxley-Lennon to remain on YouTube on the basis that his posts are not illegal and do not break the website's own rules.

Nearly 390,000 people now subscribed to Yaxley-Lennon's YouTube channel, up around 100,000 since the start of the year.

Google said it is willing to take a 'tougher line' with his content because so many users have flagged it up to moderators.

Facebook and Twitter have both banned him from their platforms

A spokesman said: 'After consulting with third-party experts, we are applying a tougher treatment to Tommy Robinson's channel in keeping with our policies on borderline content.

'The content will be placed behind an interstitial, removed from recommendations, and stripped of key features including live streaming, comments, suggested videos and likes.'

Viewers who press play on one of Yaxley-Lennon's videos are warned that the content has been 'identified by the YouTube community as inappropriate or offensive to some audiences'.

They are then presented with one button, stating 'I understand and wish to proceed'. If they press the button, the video plays.

The far-right activist had dozens of videos live on YouTube this week, including a vile clip of him punching a migrant in Italy.

In another video - posted days after the New Zealand massacre that killed 50 people - Yaxley-Lennon told his followers that the population risks being replaced by 'mass, mass numbers of Islamic immigration'.

Deputy Labour leader Tom Watson and Tory MP Damian Collins, chairman of the Digital, Culture, Media and Sport Committee, have also called for the far-right activist to be shut down online.

Yaxley-Lennon claims that efforts to ban him online are part of a far-reaching conspiracy by the media and the 'establishment' designed to silence 'any opposition to their globalist plans'.