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A woman hurled homophobic slurs at a gay couple in the UK before attacking them — and even encouraged a young girl she was with to take part in the tirade, the victims and police said.

Simon Jenkins, 33, and his partner, Ben Drawer, 21, were holding hands as they walked away from a train station in Birmingham, England, last month when they passed a woman in her 30s with two kids who allegedly made anti-gay comments, Birmingham Live reported.

“As we were walking, I overheard a woman use a homophobic term towards us,” Jenkins told the news outlet, adding that he then “challenged her and asked her to repeat what she said, expecting her to deny it or just carry on walking and ignore us.”

When Jenkins confronted the woman, she allegedly hit the couple with her shoe as she called them “disgusting” and barked that they would “burn in hell,” according to the news site.

The woman “exploded with rage,” Jenkins said.

“She called us dirty bastards, shouted sexually explicit things at us and made more homophobic remarks,” said the victim.

As the incident unfolded on May 31 near the Selly Oak train station, Jenkins and Drawer tried to film the encounter on a cellphone, but the woman “slapped” the phone away and threatened to hit the couple with a wooden plank.

“She shouted that ‘some people think this is OK — but I don’t’ and threatened to ‘knock us across the street,’” according to Jenkins.

He added: “She kept trying to pull my phone out of my hands and eventually smacked it out, then took off her shoe and hit us with it.”

“When she picked up a wooden plank and looked as though she was going to hit us with it, we ran,” he said.

Jenkins said that during the attack, the woman had two girls with her — one who was about 10 and the other who was 5 or 6.

“The older girl was even encouraged to join in with the homophobic abuse,” Jenkins told Birmingham Live.

No arrests have been made in the attack and West Midlands police are treating the incident as a hate crime, according to the news outlet.

The ordeal has made the couple afraid to leave their home.

“It has put us off going out holding hands,” said Jenkins, a college lecturer. “Every time I leave home with my partner, I feel like I’m going into battle.”

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