Lekota blasts ‘fascist’ ANC


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Cope leader Mosiuoa Lekota has accused the ANC of opening the door to dictatorship by using “fascist tactics” in its response to the controversial painting, The Spear, by Brett Murray.

By calling on City Press and the Goodman Gallery to remove images of the painting from their website and exhibition, the ruling party had expunged section 16 (1) and (2) from the constitution, he said.

“Specifically the ‘freedom of the press and other media’ provided for in 16(1)(a) and ‘freedom of artistic creativity’ articulated in 16(1)(c) became casualties.”

Lekota said SACP leader Blade Nzimande and ANC secretary general Gwede Mantashe had personally agitated for a boycott of City Press.

“Now the editor of the City Press, anxious about her personal safety and that of her journalists, apologised for exercising her constitutionally enshrined right and removed the artistic work from the website of the newspaper.”

Lekota said the owner of the Goodman Gallery had “been dragged before TV to issue an apology under military-like supervision”.

“When the ruling party, that is, the government, frog-marches a citizen in this way, as (Arts and Culture Minister Paul) Mashatile did, and threatens to unleash mass force on society, the constitution is thrown out of the window, Lekota said.

Meanwhile, despite all its demands being met on the painting, the ANC was still not happy. An olive branch from City Press. A written apology from the Goodman Gallery. And a public explanation from artist Murray.

Even with those three victories for the ANC, the anti-Spear march on Tuesday ended in an ultimatum: remove the painting depicting President Jacob Zuma’s genitals from the Goodman Gallery website, or the gallery itself will be shut down.

At 2pm, ANC secretary-general Gwede Mantashe emerged smiling from the building on Jan Smuts Avenue and announced the gallery would remove the image from its website. “Mission accomplished comrades,” shouted Mantashe.

The crowds cheered.

Mantashe added: “We can now read the City Press, but don’t buy last week’s copy… You have achieved your mission.”

Almost immediately afterwards, the Goodman Gallery released a statement saying it had been in consultation with the ANC, but no such decision had been made. This was not the only disputed issue.

Mantashe and Higher Education Minister Blade Nzimande could not agree on the fate of the painting.

Nzimande said it should not go to its German buyer, but be destroyed. However, Mantashe declared that its removal from the gallery and the two major websites on which it featured was enough.

“Freedom of expression will be defended… but it is not a licence to insult or trample on dignity,” said Mantashe.

Despite the ANC applying to the police for a march by 50 000 people, no more than 5 000 arrived in hired buses on Tuesday.

But police took no chances, deploying a huge contingent of riot police, some on horseback, and frequent helicopter flyovers overhead.

Two women, standing with notebooks on the fringes of the protest, quietly sketched protesters, while demonstrators held up placards that read: “Draw your white father naked, not our president”, “We say NO to abuse of artistic expression”, and “Less skin, we win”.

Last week, Cosatu, the National Union of Mineworkers and the SACP called on their members to storm the Goodman Gallery where the painting was then on display.

Louis Mabokela, one of the men accused of defacing the painting, was among the protesters on Tuesday. “The insult needed to be covered, so I did it,” he said.

His uncle, Stephen Sefofa, who paid Mabokela’s bail after his arrest last week, said: “An insult is an insult… We have to march.”

The pair were happy to hear of City Press editor Ferial Haffajee’s apology and removal of the image from the paper’s website, but said they were awaiting apologies from the other parties involved.

Mabokela was filmed being head-butted by a Goodman Gallery security guard after smearing black paint on the painting last week. He is to appear again in the Hillbrow Magistrate’s Court.

“Today’s march is not only about Zuma, (but) all South Africans,” ANC secretary for Mpumalanga, Thokozani Ntuli, said. “We would also defend your dignity if you were embarrassed like this. (Zuma is) president but also a human being. He deserves to be respected… like everyone else, black or white.”

The Star

Doha mall owner faces arrest


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Qatar issued arrest orders for the owner of a fire-ravaged mall and four others as investigations widened on Wednesday into possible safety lapses during a blaze that killed 19 people, including 13 children at a daycare centre catering to the Gulf nation’s large expatriate community.

The official Qatar News Agency said Attorney General Ali bin Feitais al-Marri also ordered the detention of the owner of the child care facility where the children and four workers died in Monday’s fire at the Gulf nation’s biggest mall. The others facing arrest are mall officials, including the director of security.

Sprinkler systems malfunctioned at the Villaggio complex and rescue crews struggled without blueprints of the vast complex, bringing calls for sweeping safety and licensing reviews in one of the world’s fastest-growing countries. Two firefighters also were killed.

It was not immediately clear whether charges would be filed.

Investigators, meanwhile, are carrying out extensive probes through the fire-damaged sections of the mall, but authorities have not announced the cause of the fire. Findings from the state-ordered inquest are expected within a week.

The tragedy also is likely to push authorities across the Gulf to further examine fire safety rules in a region where the drive to build fast and big has brought concerns about the quality of emergency planning.

Rescue crews in Qatar’s capital Doha had to hack through the roof of the mammoth Villaggio mall to reach the child care facility, where the victims included two-year-old New Zealand triplets and three Spanish siblings.

“What happened is similar to murder because of the lack of safety measures in such complexes,” wrote Saleh al-Kuwari, editor of the Al Raya newspaper in Doha.

An editorial in the newspaper Al Arab urged officials around the Gulf to consider creating special firefighting and civil defence units for the energy-rich region’s huge malls. The Villaggio includes an ice skating rink, theme park, movie theatre and indoor Venice-style gondola rides.

“Safety requirements must be stressed,” said the editorial. “They also need regular review.”

Qatar’s Interior Ministry said the mall’s sprinkler system malfunctioned, and rescue efforts were hampered by a lack of floor plans. Other Gulf nations also have confronted concerns about whether public safety planning can keep pace with the construction boom.

In November, firefighters in Sharjah, north of Dubai, struggled to battle a blaze in a 25-story tower without equipment to reach the flames. The United Arab Emirates is considering bans on flammable panels in high-rise buildings after more recent back-to-back tower fires.

An Al Arab journalist, Marzouki Faisal, reported that the route to the Villaggio daycare centre wound through a “maze” of narrow halls and stairways. He and others questioned the rules that allow childcare sites inside commercial buildings.

“What happened is murder as a result of negligence and idleness,” he wrote.

The full list of those killed has not been issued by Qatar officials, but most of the nationalities are known from statements by various countries and families. The young victims include a 3-year-old French child, four Spanish children, an 18-month-old South African toddler and the New Zealand triplets, Lillie, Jackson and Willsher Weekes.

“It’s absolutely devastating,” the triplets’ grandmother, Jo Turner, told Fairfax Media in New Zealand.

A statement issued by the triplets’ family said, “Lillie, Jackson and Willsher came into this world together and were inseparable as siblings, best friends and the joy of our life. Tragically, they left together after only two short years.”

The triplets’ parents clutched red roses and a single teddy bear during a memorial gathering Tuesday in Doha.

Spain’s El Pais newspaper said the Spanish children killed included three siblings, aged 2 to 7, and a 7-year-old girl from another family. Another newspaper, El Mundo, said the Spanish mothers dropped off their children while they shopped.

Tennis star Rafael Nadal of Spain was among those expressing their condolences via Twitter to the “families and friends” of the victims. The world’s No. 2 tennis player has appeared in a number of tournaments in the Gulf state.

At least three of the nursery teachers, women from the Philippines, died of smoke inhalation, Philippine Foreign Affairs spokesman Raul Hernandez said in Manila. A South African woman who worked at the centre also died, said a South African government statement.

Qatar Prime Minister Sheik Hamad bin Jassem bin Jabr Al Thani offered condolences to “all the parents and relatives of those killed in this horrible fire.”

The Villaggio opened in 2006 and is one of the most popular shopping and amusement destinations in fast-growing Qatar, which will host football’s 2022 World Cup.

More than three-quarters of Qatar’s population of 1.8 million residents are foreigners attracted to the tiny nation for jobs ranging from labourers to government advisers.

Sheik Abdullah bin Nasser Al Thani, Qatar’s minister of state for interior affairs, said authorities carried out repeated search operations in the mall and confirmed that no one was still trapped inside, according to comments posted on the ministry’s website. –

Sapa-AP

ANCYL absent at ‘The Spear’ protest


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 The ANC Youth League was notably absent from Tuesday’s protest at the Goodman Gallery in Joburg.

While representatives of all other ANC structures and their affiliates marched from Zoo Lake to the gallery in Rosebank to hand over a memorandum protesting against Brett Murray’s painting “The Spear”, the ANCYL did not turn up.

A Goodman Gallery representative accepted the memorandum and agreed to remove the painting from their website.

The ANC called off its boycott of City Press, after the newspaper, which had published a photo of the work on its website, took it down.

Throughout the furore over the painting, the Youth League had remained silent. In its Sunday edition, however, City Press published an editorial by the league’s expelled president, Julius Malema.

Malema defended the gallery’s right to display the “The Spear”, a painting which, until it was defaced last Tuesday, depicted President Jacob Zuma with his genitals exposed. Malema wrote that City Press had a right to publish it. He said the voice of reason in South Africa was disappearing.

“No one had the courage to stand up and speak against undemocratic and potentially despotic practices from within the ranks of the democratic movement.

“Banning newspapers simply because we disagree with them, and boycotting them on the basis of believing that our conception of truth is absolute, poses a real threat to our democracy,” he wrote.

Someone in the crowd held up a poster: “Juju we do not miss you boy.” Juju is Malema’s nickname.

Cosatu president Sdumo Dlamini said in isiZulu part of artist Brett Murray’s agenda was to undermine the rule of the majority.

“The insult to Zuma was an insult to all of us. You strike Zuma, you strike us,” he said.

Deputy Health Minister Gwen Ramokgopa said if the president was under attack, everyone was under attack. – Sapa

Kenya on a learning curve at 8-Nations International Tournament


BY Obakeng Maje

Kenya head into their final match of the 8-Nations International under-20 Tournament on the back of two defeats, but remains upbeat about their experiences in Cape Town.

The east African side faces Cameroon on Wednesday (30 May) night at the Athlone Stadium in the final game of Group B. Kickoff is at 20H30.

Neither side can qualify for the semi-finals – Kenya having lost 3-0 to Japan and 4-0 to Brazil, while Cameroon went down 1-0 to Brazil and 2-1 to Japan.

However, for the Kenyan contingent, the outing down south has been a constructive and rewarding exercise, even if results have not gone their way. 

Long-serving former Santos and Kenyan captain Musa Otieno is one of the most respected players in his home country, where he runs a football academy.

Otieno has been working in an advisory capacity with the Kenya technical team down in the Mother City, and is upbeat in terms of how his country’s participation in the prestigious tournament will be of future benefit.

“It’s good for us to get a chance to play in this kind of tournament. We have learnt a lot and I believe we have been beaten through little mistakes the boys made.

“It’s a learning process for us and it’s a good chance for the federation to look at the players. The average age of this team is only 16 or 17, they are very young compared to the other countries.

“For us losing was not a big deal. Yes we feel bad, but the boys are learning fast and I’m very happy with the way they are performing, it’s all part of a building process,” he said.

For Japan coach Yasushi Yoshida and his team, it’s been a successful tournament thus far, with wins over Kenya and Cameroon.

The Asian side have been highly impressive, showing superb technical and tactical ability, setting the tournament alight with some wonderful football.
Yoshida can lead his charges into battle against Brazil without any pressure upon their shoulders, a place in the semi-finals already secured. The match kicks off at 18H00, at Athlone Stadium.

For Yoshida, the excursion to Africa has been a success in that it has given his team the chance to play against the kind of opposition they would not normally come up against.

“Cameroon had a really high level of playing – they are very strong and very fast and we don’t have a strong team like Cameroon in Asian countries, so it was a very good experience for us.

“Our players come from all over Japan – playing professionally in our two leagues with 40 clubs – J1 and J2. We gathered our greatest players and we are happy with the chance to come and play in this tournament.

“Now we look forward to a rare opportunity for us to play against Brazil, so we are looking forward to the occasion and will be giving it our best effort,” he said.

Mphela confident goals will come


BY Obakeng Maje

Bafana Bafana striker Katlego Mphela believes that the days of Bafana Bafana not scoring goals will now come to an end.

Killer, as he is commonly known, was speaking to the media after the South African Senior Men’s National Team’s training session on Tuesday, 29 May 2012 at the Royal Marang Sports Complex in Phokeng near Rustenburg.

Bafana Bafana will play in a 2014 FIFA World Cup Brazil qualifier against Ethiopia. The match will take place on Sunday, 3 June at the Royal Bafokeng Sports Palace in Phokeng.

This is the national team’s second week in camp.

“We all know goal scoring has been a problem but I believe with time we will get it right. There is a healthy competition for strikers which is good. Siyabonga Nomvethe and  Eleazar  Rodgers did very well during the PSL season that just ended and it’s good to have them here, we are all hoping they will continue scoring goals even for the nation,” said Mphela.

Killer was full of praise for Nomvethe.

“He has been scoring goals, and at the moment is on a high. I think he is one of the most confident players in the team, he has the experience as he has been there before so I believe he will bring a different dimension to the team,” added Mphela.

“As for Ethiopia we are in for a busy afternoon. They have very fit players who run the entire match and will give our defence a hard time, but we are ready for them.”

Defender Anele Ngcongca agrees with Mphela on the strength of Ethiopia, but also points out that the Bafana Bafana defence has been doing very well in the last few matches.

“If you look back the defence has been solid, just that the team did not score enough goals. We believe we now have enough firepower with the kind of strikers in camp. On paper it’s an easy match, but on the field it’s a different story altogether, but we will do our best to overcome them,” said Ngcongca.

“For most teams playing South Africa is like a cup final so they will make things difficult for us. They are stubborn in defence and have lots of energy, but they will not come at us and instead try to catch us on a counter. This could be a tricky clash let’s just hope we come out on top this Sunday.”

The defender also believes a good crowd at the Royal Bafokeng Sports Palace could be the boost the team needs.

“Crowds play a big role for us as players. I know we haven’t been winning games but this is one of the matches where we need our supporters behind so we start the 2014 campaign on a good note,” said Ngcongca.

Bafana Bafana defender Siyabonga Sangweni will miss the team’s afternoon training session after a recurring ankle injury he aggravated in the morning training session.

The medical department is awaiting results from the MRI scan.

SAFA President congratulates Manca for sterling work in the Cup final


BY Obakeng Maje

The appointment of Baaitse Manca in the Nedbank Cup final on Saturday, 26 May 2012 is a first for women in the history of South African football.

South African Football Association (SAFA) President, Kirsten Nematandani congratulated Manca for the magnificent manner in which she executed her duties and responsibilities on Saturday in the match between cross-town rivals Supersport United and Mamelodi Sundowns, adding that the official had done South Africa proud.

“This is great news which should even hog the international limelight. Not only was she in the thick of action but was meticulous and made great calls especially the offside calls. She has a great future in this game which in the past has been a preserved of male species,” said the SAFA President.

SAFA’s Head of Referees, Adeel Carelse said the Association took the bold step in her appointment in view of the success of Project Equity (The Development of Female Referees).   This project is in its second year and has borne results beyond what was initially envisaged.

“Manca earned her appointment purely on merit. She has also been appointed as the Fourth Official in the upcoming Banyana Banyana match against Nigeria. This is good both for her and the country,” said Carelse.

Already a member of the FIFA Panel of Referees, Manca is destined for even greater honours.  She has been a member of the National Panel of Referees since 2007 and gained valuable experience since being exposed to the rigours of officiating in the Premier Soccer League (PSL).

Project Equity is one of five projects currently being run by the referees department in order to increase the skill level of referees.   

At present there are 5 females on the National Panel of Referees.   For the operational season 2012/2013 a further 3 ladies have been earmarked for possible promotion depending on their assessment at the Higher National Certification Course due to commence on 15th July 2012.

Two of Manca’s fellow referees, Nomvula Masilela and Assistance Sokhela have been invited to join the CAF Elite Referees Panel and will be going to Cameroon to complete the pre-requisite course on the 18-23 June 2012.

Gallery agrees to remove Spear from site


Johannesburg – The Goodman Gallery agreed to remove The Spear painting from its website, it was reported on Tuesday. 

This followed a march to the gallery in Rosebank, Johannesburg, by about 3 000 ANC supporters.

The ANC has also called off a boycott of City Press newspaper.

More details to follow.

City Press boycott called off


Johannesburg – The boycott of the City Press newspaper has been called off and the Goodman Gallery has agreed to remove the paining The Spear from its website, ANC secretary generalGwede Mantashe said on Tuesday.

“The Goodman Gallery has agreed to remove the painting from the website,” he told protesters outside the gallery in Johannesburg.

“You can also buy the City Press now, just not last week’s copy.”

The ANC and its alliance partners called a boycott of the City Press newspaper last week when it refused to remove a picture of the Brett Murraypainting The Spear from its website.

The newspaper first broke the story when it reviewed Murray’s exhibition Hail to the Thief II. The painting depicts President Jacob Zuma with his genitals exposed.

Its editor-in-chief Ferial Haffajee decided on Monday to remove the image.

“The Spear is down, out of care and fear,” she said in an editorial.

– SAPA

Mphela is staying at Sundowns… for now


BY Tiyani wa ka Mabasa

Katlego Mphela will not be leaving Mamelodi Sundowns, contrary to a rumour doing the rounds.   

According to reports, ‘Killer’ could be joining Kaizer Chiefs but the player’s agent Glyn Binkin has spoken to KickOff.com about the player’s future and he says Mphela is staying in Chloorkop.
 
“Katlego still has two years left on his contract with Sundowns and at this stage there is no discussion over a transfer, because no club has approached Sundowns,” Binkin says.
 
“His first option is to go to Europe, but nothing has come through yet so Katlego will stay with Sundowns,” he adds.
 
Follow me on Twitter @Taung_DailyNews

 

Can we all learn to be psychic?


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London – This is a strange way to spend a Thursday morning. I am sitting in a living room in Watford, Hertfordshire, with my eyes closed, trying to summon up my ‘spirit guide’ with the help of Britain’s most accurate medium.

“As you breathe in and out, let any thoughts drift away. Now send a thought asking your spirit guide to step into this quiet place and see if you feel any sense of their presence,” says my teacher. My mind is spinning because after a few seconds, I do feel something – or rather hear something. Out of nowhere the room has filled with the sound of a ferocious wind, whistling around me, even though outside it is a still, sunny day.

“I hear wind!” I exclaim. “Really strong wind, like we’re in the middle of a storm.” I hear a chuckle and open my eyes.

“That’s a passing train, going through a tunnel. They make that noise all the time – quite handy to have near a medium’s house,” jokes my psychic leader.

Oh dear, so it turns out I’m not really in tune with the spirit world – at least not yet. But we can all develop psychic, or intuitive skills, according to medium Gordon Smith, who is renowned for his ability to pinpoint exact names of people, places and even streets important to a person’s life. He’s just written a book called Intuitive Studies: A Complete Course in Mediumship, which promises to help people harness their intuitive powers – and despite having all the psychic powers of a dustbin I am here to get a one-to-one lesson.

‘We all have a sixth sense, times when you just know something; say that your mom is going to call, or that someone in your family isn’t well. This is our intuition – and instead of ignoring it, we should hone it and heighten it. People think that the spirit world is full of creepy ghosts and ghouls, but it’s not. It is tapping in to the higher consciousness of spirits of people who have been here before – a kind of collective intelligence.’

Gordon was just a boy when he started to have visions. When he was seven or eight a friend of his mother’s passed him on the street and had a little chat. When he told his mom she got very upset. “She freaked out and I didn’t know what I’d done wrong, it turned out that this man had died the week before. I had several experiences like this. They never bothered me but because of other people’s reactions, I learnt to shut up about it.”

But then in his early 20s a friend’s brother died in a house fire and the night he died, he appeared in Gordon’s bedroom.

“It was 3am and he just appeared in my room. I was stunned and shocked and before I could say anything he had vanished through the floorboards. I had a horrible sense of foreboding, I knew that I was going to get bad news in the morning – and I did. It turned out he had died at exactly that time.”

Since then, Gordon has been communicating with the spirit world on a daily basis. He used to do readings around his job as a barber, which earned him the nickname ‘The Psychic Barber’ – but now he is a full-time medium. His abilities have been tested by scientists at Glasgow University, and his astonishing accuracy has made him the subject of TV several documentaries.

People come to him for all sorts of reasons. Most often he acts as a medium, passing consoling messages from the dead to the bereaved – but he is also a psychic too, performing readings for people. So will he be able to tell me when I will meet the love of my life?

Or better still, teach me how to use my intuition to spot him myself? While Gordon believes that his extreme gift is something he was born with, he says “anyone can communicate with the spirit world if they know how to open up”. So could I reach this higher consciousness? The first steps are simple …

SILENCE IS GOLDEN

“You cannot tap into your intuition if your head is busy with a million different thoughts,” says Gordon. “We should all sit in silence for at least an hour once a week. Close your eyes, take deep breaths and relax.”

Sitting on Gordon’s sofa, I give it a go. I close my eyes and try to think of nothing but all I can think about is that fact that I forgot to take my washing out of the machine this morning. “Thoughts will come into your head but you just let them go. With practice you will start to declutter your mind and see things more clearly,” he says.

HEED THOSE VOICES IN YOUR HEAD

When you get used to sitting in silence you will start to hear your inner voice that we so often ignore, says Gordon. “If I’ve trained to do anything in the past 30 years, it’s to listen to my inner voice,” he says. “One night, years ago, I’d been invited to a party but as soon as I stepped into the entrance of the bar, my tummy went ‘boom!’.

“Something felt wrong so I told my friends I wasn’t going in, and we left and went to another bar. We heard the next day that a guy had walked into the party with a knife that night and stabbed two people.” This gives me a shiver.

“This won’t stop everything negative in your life – there are some things you can do nothing about, for example my mom’s dying of cancer at the moment but it can help you avoid certain situations,” he says.

I ask if he knew that his mother was sick before she was diagnosed. “She was a very healthy strong woman but had been complaining of getting tired and having something in her throat. One day I woke up and just knew something was wrong. I phoned home and my brother told me Mom had just got back from the doctor who thought it might be cancer.”

BEFRIEND A ‘SPIRIT GUIDE’

Once you’ve found your inner voice, the next step is to find your spirit guide, says Gordon. He believes that when we die, our spirits remain floating around and that they are always communicating with us, if we’ll listen.

Gordon also thinks that each of us has a spirit guide, like a guardian angel, who is there for us all the time if we need him or her. It sounds nuts, but the way he talks about his spirit guide – an old man, whom he has named Chi – is so matter of fact that it’s like he’s talking about a friend.

I attempt to find mine. Sitting on the chair Gordon tells me to close my eyes and ask for my spirit guide to come to me and to give me a sign. I do. Nothing happens. I wait. Then I see a little sparkling light in the corner of my eye – like a little Tinkerbell – but then I realise that it’s just the sun shining though the window. I feel silly. Gordon, sweetly, tells me this is normal. “Believe me, you’ll know when it happens. And don’t worry if it doesn’t, there are no prizes for any of this,” he says.

FEEL THE AURA

Even if you don’t find – or believe in – a spirit guide, you can use your intuition to tap into other people’s feelings. “We all do this anyway,” says Gordon. “You might be with a loved one and you know that what they are saying is not how they are feeling. People mask their thoughts but you sense their feelings in the atmosphere.”

Gordon asks me to try an exercise in which I read his feelings. The idea is that I stand behind him with my hands hovering over his shoulder while he remembers something that prompts strong emotions. The reason Gordon suggested I hold my hands an inch away from his body is to get in touch with his aura – an energy that comes off all of us. While some people claim to see auras, Gordon says we should start by feeling their presence.

After a minute or so with my hands hovering, I feel nothing at all – except panic that I’m feeling nothing at all. Then the picture of a brown horse flashes into my head, and pops out again. I tell Gordon about the horse and he smiles. “I was thinking about the week my father was dying,” he says. “No horses there.”

We swap places and I remember a time when a male friend died and Gordon picks up “female healing energy”. Oh well. ‘”’m really tired,” he says, not remotely embarrassed. Even professionals have off days.

HOW TO SPOT A FAKE PSYCHIC

This is all very good but can I look into people’s futures? Or can Gordon look into mine? Can he tell me whether I’m going to meet a tall, handsome stranger and move to the South of France? “No,” he says. “Seeing the future is a 50-50 guess based on a feeling that you get from people. You might get it right but you might not.”

So where are fortune tellers and psychics on hotlines getting their information from? “I have no idea,” says Gordon. “If you go to a psychic or a medium who asks you lots of questions, walk away. They should be telling you information, not the other way around.” What Gordon can tell me is that there are no messages from the dead he needs to pass on to me and that actually, “everything is OK in your life”. Which indeed it is. “When things are good, don’t go poking around, just enjoy what you have,” he says, before showing me to the door.

But Gordon gives me some parting words: “Stop looking for Prince Charming, and start looking for Mr Right Here.” Ooh! I do a mental check of all the men in my life – could he be talking about my postman? An overlooked friend? My grumpy neighbour?

I wonder if Gordon can see something in the future or if he is just using old-fashioned common sense – whatever it is, I think we can all learn a little bit from Gordon, the most down-to-earth psychic in the world. And after an hour with him, I left convinced that not only can Gordon communicate with higher powers – perhaps we all can. – Daily Mail

* Intuitive Studies: A Complete Course In Mediumship by Gordon Smith is published by Hay House.