A council has taken down around 60 white supremacist posters plastered around a UK town over the weekend, authorities have said.

"It's OK to be white" and "reject white guilt" were written on signs across Ipswich, according to images shared on social media.

Max Stocker, a council spokesperson, told The Independent they have been working to remove the posters, which also included the message "beware non-white rape gangs".

Similar messages have been spotted around different parts of the UK in recent months, including Hull and Perth, according to local media.

Signs saying "it's OK to be white" were also put up in Bristol city centre last week.

The far-right plot to normalise white supremacy in the US Show all 23 1 /23 The far-right plot to normalise white supremacy in the US The far-right plot to normalise white supremacy in the US Members of the ShieldWall Network, a white nationalist group, burn a swastika and cross during a party outside Atkins, Arkansas, U.S on March 9, 2019 Reuters The far-right plot to normalise white supremacy in the US Members of the ShieldWall Network hold up balloons decorated as the face of Adolf Hitler and give a white-power hand signal as they celebrate the German fascist's birthday outside Atkins, Arkansas REUTERS The far-right plot to normalise white supremacy in the US Billy Roper of the ShieldWall Network attends a party at a home outside Atkins. The group primarily operates in Arkansas and includes three other members who were recently charged with assault in connection with the beating of a gay man, according to police reports REUTERS The far-right plot to normalise white supremacy in the US Members of the ShieldWall Network march to a rally opposing legal abortion and supporting gun rights at the state capitol in Little Rock, Arkansas REUTERS The far-right plot to normalise white supremacy in the US Jeff Schoep, former chairman of the National Socialist Movement, speaks during a rally at the state capitol in Little Rock, Arkansas on November 10, 2018 Reuters The far-right plot to normalise white supremacy in the US Crosses lit by members of the Loyal White Knights of the Ku Klux Klan burn outside Yanceyville, North Carolina, U.S., November 4, 2017. 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Some of these posters bear the mark of Hundred-Hands, a group encouraging the spread of posters containing messages of white supremacy over social media.

Sam Murray, an Ipswich resident, claimed she removed 10 signs in the town herself.

"This does not have a place here," she told The Independent.

"Ipswich is a nice town," she said. "It is diverse and normally people just get on with their lives."

(Ipswich Borough Council ) (Ipswich Borough Council)

Bryony Rudkin, deputy leader of Ipswich Borough Council, called the white supremacist messages "deplorable".

"This racist behaviour does not represent the people of Ipswich or our town," she said.

"Council staff have been out over the weekend taking these stickers down."

Police are investigating the posters and aware of similar reports in other areas of the UK, a Suffolk Police spokesperson said.

"It's OK to be white" spread as a slogan across the US several years ago, and posters started appearing across American universities.

The phrase received support from neo-Nazi and white supremacist groups, as well as alt-right figures.

An online store stopped selling T-shirts with the message "it's OK to be white" earlier this year after acknowledging backlash over the "divisive slogan".