An infamous far-right, anti-Islam campaigner who helped lead a boycott against halal certification has been caught out ordering from a kebab store which locals claim is halal certified.

Blair Cottrell has been aligned with both United Patriots Front and Reclaim Australia, groups known for 'outing' restaurants and suppliers with halal certified products, believing the practise funds Islamic terrorism.

But on Wednesday, the Victorian nationalist was spotted at Karingal Kebabs in Frankston, south-east Melbourne - a kebab store which locals claim is halal certified.

Blair Cottrell, aligned with anti-Islamic campaigners against halal United Patriots Front and Reclaim Australia, has been spotted ordering from a halal certified kebab store

An administrator at Melbourne AntiFascist, who posted the images on Wednesday morning, claimed the far-right nationalist ordered a kebab mixed with hummus, garlic yoghurt and barbeque sauce

Daily Mail Australia could not reach Karingal Kebabs to confirm that claim, and it is not specified on the takeaway joint's website.

However, multiple locals have said it is halal certified.

One of the images was later posted to a Facebook page that supports Neil Erikson, a fellow far-right campaigner.

The image had been edited to say Mr Cottrell had ordered an orange juice and that the employee was ‘Aussie’.

One of the images was later posted to a Facebook page that supports Neil Erikson, a fellow far-right campaigner. The image had been edited to say Mr Cottrell ordered an orange juice and that the employee was ‘Aussie'

A screenshot of a text message conversation allegedly between Mr Cottrell and a UPF member

However, the administrator for Melbourne AntiFascist, who posted the images on Wednesday morning, said he had indeed ordered a kebab mixed with hummus, garlic yoghurt and barbeque sauce.

‘We also understand although can’t confirm that it was ordered as part of a combo with fries and an orange juice,’ the administrator said, adding that he ordered ‘a big ol zub with extra tzatziki’.

Others in the comment thread pointed out Mr Cottrell was then pictured sitting with his unopened orange juice, which suggests he was most likely waiting for food to arrive.

‘Blair Cottrell visits the… kebab shop? Wait, what? Hahahahahahahahahaha,’ the Melbourne AntiFascist post said.

The images were later shared by fellow anti-fascist page Slackbastard, who wrote: ‘Bloody hell – you know things are crook when even Der Führer is happy to be halalified.’

When the images were shared to the United Patriots Front, one person mocked Mr Cottrell: ‘I think all Muslims want to kill me and take over the world but I like there [sic] food.’

A screenshot of a text message conversation allegedly between Mr Cottrell and a UPF member appears to show him warn against sharing the images.

It apparently shows Mr Cottrell warn against what the fellow member was ‘about to do’, potentially referring to sharing or posting the images.

It has not been confirmed whether the takeaway joint at Frankston, south-east Melbourne is halal certified. Several locals claim it is

The other person replied: ‘I’m being an actual Australian and eradicating poor behaviour from so called leaders.’

Mr Cottrell then allegedly replied: ‘There will be consequences.’

Daily Mail Australia has attempted to reach both Mr Cottrell and Karingal Kebabs.

Late last year Mr Cottrell became the face of anti-Islamic rallies, going so far as staging a fake beheading and drenched a council chamber floor with fake blood.

Although he publicly declared he is not neo-nazi, Facebook posts later surfaced which showed him supporting Hitler, while making offensive rants against Jews, Muslims and women.

Mr Cottrell was previously aligned with Reclaim Australia, before splitting to United Patriots Front.

He was then ousted as leader but has maintained a following as an anti-Islamic campaigner.

He has also posted to the Facebook page of Boycott Halal in Australia.

A Senate inquiry in September last year found no direct link between halal certification and terrorism, ABC reported.

Late last year Mr Cottrell became the face of anti-Islamic rallies, going so far as staging a fake beheading and drenched a council chamber floor with fake blood (pictured)

Mr Cottrell is aligned with United Patriots Front, who last year protested against a proposed mosque at Bendigo in Victoria (pictured)

Although he publicly declared he is not involved with neo-nazism, social media posts later surfaced which showed offensive Facebook posts supporting Hitler alongside rants against Jews, Muslims and women

In one social media post, Mr Cottrell said: 'There should be a picture of this man [Hitler] in every classroom and every school, and his book should be issued to every student annually'

Mr Cottrell also liked a quote by Adolf Hitler online

He also said it was 'prejudiced' to call Hitler a 'nasty and evil person'