A 46-year-old man from Sutton, south London was arrested on Thursday

Among those to feature are Jihadi John, Anjem Choudary and Sadiq Khan

A social media campaign was launched to get people to trade the stickers

Social media users have been encouraging the spread of racist Pokemon-style stickers across the public transport network.

The stickers, plastered over buses, trains and tube stations across London, depict a number of Muslims with the slogan 'gotta catch and deport them all'.

One features Barack Obama and labels him 'Obamabinlyin', and says he is the 'USA's Muslim in Chief who has protected Islamic causes over those of the rest of the world'.

'Ginger Jihadi' Jordan Horner also appears on some of the stickers, dubbing him 'Gingermo' whose weakness is being 'allergic to sunlight'.

One sticker features Barack Obama and labels him 'Obamabinlyin', and says he is the 'USA's Muslim in Chief who has protected Islamic causes over those of the rest of the world'

Anjem Choudary, one of Britain's most notorious hate preachers, features as 'Hatechu'

Isis executioner Jihadi John, who became infamous for videos in which he murdered captives, is among those who appear in the racist stickers

Anjem Choudary, one of Britain's most notorious hate preachers, features, as does London Mayor Sadiq Khan, who is worth the maximum 200 'terror points' with Obama.

Disgusted commuters blasted the 'appallingly racist' stickers, with anti-Muslim hate helpline TellMAMA highlighting one far-right extremist Twitter account which has posted several images of the stickers.

Green Party deputy leader Amelia Womack condemned the stickers, labelling them 'disgusting'.

She urged anyone who spotted the stickers to report them to the British Transport Police.

London Mayor Sadiq Khan is worth the maximum 200 'terror points', along with Obama

'Ginger Jihadi' Jordan Horner also appears on some of the stickers, dubbing him 'Gingermo' whose weakness is being 'allergic to sunlight'

The stickers also ridicule moderate Muslims, claiming that they have a 'secret fondness for pork'

Web user 'Anti Jihadi Frog' attempted to recruit distributors earlier this month, tweeting: 'I am looking for some London/South-East based patriots to join an upcoming sticker campaign.'

They have been spotted as far away as West Berkshire and at a service station on the M6 near Knutsford, Cheshire.

A number of far-right Twitter accounts have been openly sharing photos of the stickers, urging people to collect and swap them.

A 46-year-old man from Sutton, south London was arrested on Thursday by British Transport Police on suspicion of inciting racial hatred.