A BLOGGER mocked Anne Frank and Holocaust survivors, including a Nobel Prize winner, in a song she performed and uploaded to the internet, a court has heard.

Alison Chabloz’s performance of the song (((Survivors))), was applauded by her supporters after footage of it was played at the opening of her trial.

The 53-year-old, who carried two bunches of flowers into the court before taking her seat in the dock, appeared to mouth along to a video of the song at Westminster Magistrates’ Court.

Addressing the packed public gallery where people clapped at the end of the song, District Judge John Zani said anyone who repeated such behaviour would be ordered to leave the court.

Chabloz, of Charlesworth, Derbyshire, faces five charges related to three songs, which the prosecution termed ‘grossly offensive’.

Prosecutor Karen Robinson said: ‘The songs are designed to provoke maximum upset and discomfort.

‘By the standards of an open and multi-racial society, they are grossly offensive.’

Introducing (((Survivors))), Chabloz can be heard noting the brackets symbol in the name — something the prosecution said showed she was aware that it was often used as an anti-Semitic gesture known as an Echo.

The song devotes a verse to Otto Frank and his daughter Anne, whose diary is famous worldwide as a moving account of one Jewish family’s ordeal during the Second World War.

The lyrics claim that while the young girl, who died just weeks before the liberation of the Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, wrote the introduction, ‘the rest was penned by someone else then published by me (Otto)’.

The song also brands Nobel Prize winner and Holocaust survivor Elie Wiesel a liar.

Of a book Mr Wiesel wrote recounting his experience, Chabloz is heard to sing: ‘It’s full of nonsense tales of course, what did you expect? But it made me very wealthy, as a liar I’m the best.’

The defendant denies two counts of sending by a public communications network an offensive, indecent or menacing message or material in relation to two of the three songs.

She also denies two alternative counts of ‘causing’ offensive material to be sent by a public communications network, after her performance was posted on her blog, Tellmemorelies.wordpress.com.

A song entitled Nemo’s Anti-Semitic Universe, about what Chabloz described as an online troll has lyrics referring to notorious death camp Auschwitz as ‘a theme park just for fools’.

Both songs were performed at a London Forum Event held at the Grosvenor Hotel in London in September 2016.

The defendant, who accepted in a police interview being a ‘Holocaust revisionist’, denies a fifth charge in relation to a third song entitled I Like The Story As It Is, which describes the Holocaust as a ‘damn fine tale’.

This song, Ms Robinson said, was uploaded to YouTube by Chabloz.

She told police, the court heard, that she wanted to ‘entertain my audience, my viewers’ and to put across ‘my political artistic creative point’.

The prosecutor said: ‘These are songs, their lyrics — about matters of the utmost seriousness — sung to music and in two cases, the defendant uses traditional Jewish song music as part of her attempt to mock and provoke.’