'It is my right not to wear a shirt if I don't want to,' he said. 'This is who I am. I just don't tend to feel the cold, so all year round I wear a pair of shorts. There's nothing obscene or immoral about what I'm doing and if the association thinks it can railroad me into putting on a shirt then they're dead wrong. They are trying to take away my civil rights and I don't think it's fair.'
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Mr Burgess said that it is only in the corridors and laundry rooms that he refuses to put a shirt on, and that he is always fully dressed in the common room of the sheltered building, in Restawhyle Avenue, which houses a total of 65 supported flats. But a spokesman for Guinness Hermitage said it does not make a distinction between the different areas. It said it has issued letters to all residents reminding them of the association's policy.
Mr Burgess said: 'All the other residents I have spoken to think the letters they sent out to everyone were disgusting. Now we have had another letter calling us all to a meeting to discuss what they call anti-social behaviour, which is what staff have told me I'm doing on more than one occasion. Well, I'm going to stand up and tell them what I think of them - they can't just bully me like this. I work hard helping my local church and I would do a favour for anyone, but I won't change who I am.'
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