An anti-ULEZ 'ninja' was caught on camera scaling a traffic light and cutting down a camera with an angle grinder. In the video, the 'blade runner' can be seen hauling himself up the pole before smoothly slicing away the device, letting it crash down onto the pavement below.

Footage circulating on social media, apparently filmed by either the vandal or their accomplice, was largely showered with praise from commenters who declared it 'bloody brilliant' and suggested someone should 'buy that man a pint'. Some urged him to 'keep up the good work', however not everyone agreed - with one appearing to suggest that reversing ULEZ would endanger children's lives.

Between 1st April to 31 August, the Metropolitan Police have recorded 510 crimes relating to ULEZ cameras, with 351 of them being damaged and 159 stolen. Transport for London have stated that there are more than 3,400 ULEZ cameras in place across the London used to catch offending vehicles by scanning their number plates and charging £12.50 for any that are 'non-compliant'.

While most petrol cars registered after 2006 meet the emission standards, the RAC [via the DVLA] have concluded that 25% of cars, around 700,000, and a further 160,000 vans and lorries will be non-compliant. The video was posted and received more than 300 likes, 50 comments, and 32 shares with many people flooding to the comments online to congratulate the 'lovable ninja' on taking the ULEZ camera down.

One person commented on the video: "Love for this! [heart emoji] and the way it just smash[es] on the ground [two heart emojis]." A second said: "Absolutely fantastic go blade runners [bicep tensing emoji, heart eye emoji, blue heart emoji]".

Another said: "Like a lovable little ninja!!" A fourth said: "Buy that man a pint [thumbs up emoji, smirking emoji, laughing emoji] Keep up the good work."

Video caught the man scaling a traffic light before attacking the ULEZ camera with an angle grinder
Video caught the man scaling the traffic light before attacking the ULEZ camera with an angle grinder

A final put: "Bloody brilliant [starry eyed emoji] whoever you are thank you [heart emoji, ninja emoji, heart emoji]." However one sarcastic commenter appeared to suggest it would endanger children's lives. They said: "Heroic actions by a fellow child hater. Keep it up buddy, soon we'll slaughter all those pesky kids."

Transport for London have suggested that drivers of non-compliant vehicles sign up to their Auto Pay system for free in order to avoid receiving a PCN. This service, accessible online, automatically bills drivers when their vehicle travels within the Congestion Charge zone, LEZ and ULEZ.

A TfL spokesperson said: "Vandalism is unacceptable and all incidents on our network are reported to the police for investigation. "Criminal damage to ULEZ cameras or vehicles puts the perpetrators at risk of prosecution and injury, while simultaneously risking the safety of the public. Camera vandalism will not stop the ULEZ operating London-wide.

"All vandalised cameras are repaired or replaced as soon as possible. We have an extensive camera network which is sufficient to support the effective operation of the scheme. Anyone driving a non-compliant vehicle within the expanded zone will be detected and we advise everyone to check whether their vehicle is compliant and to consider the various support that is available to help transition to greener modes of transport."

While the Metropolitan Police declined to comment on an individual case, they issued a statement in August outlining their promise to continue to work with Transport for London to 'proactively tackle the targeting of ULEZ cameras across London'. Commander Owain Richards said: "These are clearly unacceptable acts of criminality and we have a team of officers investigating and identifying those responsible.

"We are providing a proportionate policing response, balancing these incidents against the wide range of operational demand and crime we must respond to across London. "We are working closely with Transport for London and alongside our investigation into offences already committed we are supporting them identify new ways to prevent further cameras from being damaged or stolen.

"We are continually reviewing where we need to focus our efforts and we will continue to do that over the coming weeks to ensure we are providing the service Londoners expect from us."