In my previous post, I described "the day my ministry ended". Afterwards, I went to see a witness to the final meeting, a Congregational minister (see my previous post The Day My Ministry Ended). I wanted to confirm a few things, I said:
• We had met in Neilsons Attorneys office that day. Yes, he said.OBSERVATION: I received a sanitised agreement, after that, sent to me through the deputy mayor's e-mail. But it contravened the Constitution of the Republic, Section 205(3) (the rule of law). The Human Rights Commission informed me of this, in writing.
• An attorney took notes and I took notes. Yes, he said.
• “You presented things to me,” I said. “No,” he said. It was the attorney.
• I should not enter the pulpit, I said. Yes, he said, “I do recall the message.”
• Who sent me the messages? I asked. The demands. “Do you remember who that was?” He said: “No, no.”
• Was an attorney involved? Valentine Associates. “He was at the meeting,” he said. And the Church treasurer, the Church accountant, the Honorary Secretary. A few others. And an Anglican clergyman.
• After the meeting, the attorney wrote to me that the message had come from "the people who met".
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