All three of the videos retweeted by Donald Trump from far-right activist and deputy leader of Britain First Jayda Fransen are more than six months old, and two date back as early as 2013.

The videos, tweeted by Fransen on Tuesday night and Wednesday morning and which the US President shared with his 43.6 million followers, fit with an established behaviour from Britain First of sharing old videos with misleading captions and no information about date or context.

The first video retweeted by Mr Trump shows two young men fighting near a river bank, above which Fransen wrote, "VIDEO: Muslim migrant beats up Dutch boy on crutches!".

It was originally posted to a Dutch viral video site in May 2017 and picked up by Dutch media the following day.

Two 16-year-old boys were arrested, according to De Telegraaf, and police removed the video. The boy's religion was not included in any of the reports.

Another video is titled, "Islamist mob pushes teenage boy off roof and beats him to death!".

The footage shows an incident during riots in Alexandria, Egypt, in 2013, in which several men were pushed 20-feet from a rooftop and beaten.

Hamada Badr, 19, died from his injuries and Mahmoud Hassan Ramadan was executed for his murder in March 2015, according to the Egyptian interior ministry.

The third video, which Fransen titled "Muslim Destroys Statue of Virgin Mary!", appeared on YouTube more than four years ago, in October 2013.

The caption on YouTube claims: "After invading and occupying a Christian region in Syria, a Muslim cleric declares the supremacy of Islam and Sharia law before smashing a statue of the Virgin Mary."

The lack of contextual information in the video and audio makes it very difficult to verify the claim as either true or false.

Ms Fransen and Britain First are regularly accused of sharing misleading videos and information on social media which targets Muslims.

In July, a Press Association investigation found at least 10 misleading videos posted by the group to Twitter and Facebook over a two-month period.

Despite being alerted to the misleading nature of those videos, Twitter and Facebook declined to remove them.

Jayda Fransen, Britain First leader Paul Golding and the official Britain First accounts are all verified on Facebook and Twitter.

By Alastair Reid