Is something really happening to them?
“I need help! This is killing me. I can’t stay at my own house by myself. It’s horrible. Every time I’m left alone it gets worse and more powerful, especially when I tell someone about it. Even accompanied by friends or family I get tortured. I can’t take much more of this or I’m gonna snap, just like everybody else.”
“Only someone unaffected by the abuse could possibly think this is a mental illness. Mental illness doesn’t cause burns or rashes on your skin.”
“Went to hospital and they had no idea what I had. They were leaning towards bacteria or infection and even on medication I could feel the burning at weird times.”
“This is no James Bond movie. People are dying physically and mentally. The corruption runs deep and is everywhere.”
These are just some of the comments The Reporters Inc. has received—in hundreds of emails, public comments, voice mails, social media messages, and handwritten letters—since publishing our June 2021 investigation into Targeted Individuals (TIs). They’ve come from people around the world, from Singapore to Sweden. In fact, our investigation has now become the most read story in the 17-year history of The Reporters Inc.
The respondents believe they’re being stalked, harassed, and even tortured by either “the government” or some other unknown forces. As we reported then, they say they’re being fed harmful, hurtful and painful thoughts to make them appear delusional—so that no one will give their claims credibility and conclude instead that they’re simply crazy.
The responses and reactions to that article are still flowing in—every single day. Many are seeking guidance, others begging for help. My editors are beyond surprised by the response.
I, however, am not.
Those calling themselves Targeted Individuals are mostly suffering alone. Few have anyone in their lives who believe their claims. What’s more, they tend to lose their jobs, marriages, and sometimes custody of their children. Their experiences, whether paranoid delusions or real, cause them to socially withdraw and/or be socially abandoned by friends and family. They can find nothing and no one to help them, nor to stop what they believe are deeply cruel and malicious mental, psychological and physical attacks.
As a former psychotherapist with experience working with paranoid schizophrenia, I began our investigation last year feeling pretty certain I was going to find nothing more than a sizable population suffering from, and feeding off, each other’s delusions. To a degree, this is precisely what I concluded. But there were other discoveries that made me wonder then—and still make me wonder—if there is validity to some of their claims.

One of the 400+ messages The Reporters Inc. has received from people around the world, all claiming to be a “targeted Individual.”
TAKING A HARD LOOK AT THE FEEDBACK WE RECEIVED
I consider the hundreds (400+ at this writing) of TI communications sent to The Reporters Inc. as a potential treasure trove of information, and a meaningful way to better discern whether or not something is really happening to TIs. With this in mind, I developed a list of elements with which to categorize their responses.
For example, after the U.S. government confirmed that American diplomats in Cuba and China had almost certainly been victims of directed microwaves (mostly in 2016 and 2017, with some later occurrences), I knew it was important to include the symptoms that the diplomats experienced, such as tinnitus, in my tally. And because I’d taken a deep dive into this subject in the 2021 TI article, I knew of other commonalities to look for, such as hearing vague voices (as if hearing them through a box fan), burns on the skin and/or feeling burned internally, electronics in the home acting strangely or burning out, and a sense of being stalked by unknown technological means or human strangers.
Sadly, I’ve readily determined that the majority of communications we’ve received have come from people suffering from mental illness. These include messages that are clearly nonsensical, disjointed, fail to show a clear train of thought or narrative thread, or make claims beyond even the already sensational allegations of most TIs. These usually convey obvious underlying paranoia, such as a belief that an entire ethnic group, or a celebrity, or multiple and unrelated people or organizations, are targeting and torturing them.
These comments are particularly heartbreaking, the suffering of their authors palpable, and in many cases, their determination to soldier on despite their physical, mental and emotional pain, heroic. For those who seem to be dealing with delusions, their agony is nonetheless just as real. Out of compassion and respect for these people, The Reporters Inc. had decided against sharing or quoting directly from their emails and messages.
At the same time, many other responses give so little information that I’m not able to discern whether or not there are mental health issues. These messages aren’t included in my groupings either, but they do provide more insight into the thoughts and experiences of the TI community. Some of these very brief messages simply request that people join together to create a credible case for TIs:

photo illustration
“The public needs to be made aware of the dangers that programs like RNM (Remote Neural Monitoring) pose, including the threat to everyone’s safety. EVERYONE who has become a survivor of this program and all of the supporters need to magnify their voice by reaching over state lines and beg for an end to inhumane treatment of innocent Americans. Nobody should suffer the way TIs do.”
Other responses simply request help or resources:
“Good morning. I am interested in speaking with the experts you found to discuss gangstalking. I currently have a case and experts would be great. I am willing to pay.”
“Can someone text me with info about some type of defense against the burns and level of radio activity?”
“I am a victim of governmental experiments on the mind. It is happening right now. Can anyone help me? They are torturing me for no reason. Please contact me as soon as you can.”
“My son is going through this. He is in the military and blaming them. That is why I tend to believe him. What can I do?”
“I’ve been a TI for 6-7 years (that I know of), and I was wondering if you know of any organizations I can get in touch with for support, or any individuals in your article that I can contact for support.”
Some responses are about the “evilness” of their perceived attackers and/or the cruelty of the torture they say they’re enduring.
“Although the noise campaigns, gang stalking and spiritual attacks are unlikely to stop, we can learn how to combat them more effectively by sharing our stories loud and proudly and blowing the whistle on these evil and disruptive forces.”
MASS MENTAL ILLNESS?
Other respondents talk about what they believe to be the science and/or motives for the attacks. Since these messages sometimes don’t include specific information about the person’s own experience, they don’t contain components to easily categorize, but some brought-up points that warrant mentioning.
“I ask anyone that comes to the conclusion that this is a mental disorder…how is it possible for people in totally different areas, totally different walks of life, to have the exact same experiences involving gang stalking, electronic hacking and direct energy weapons abuse? There is no such thing as collective insanity.”
It is curious that so many claim to have the same experience, but in a world connected and informed by the internet, it’s predictable that a person suffering from paranoid delusions could easily latch onto claims other TIs have posted online—and make them their own. In doing so, they get to explain their paranoid experiences in a way that is believed to be real, at least by the thousands of TIs online. They also attain a ready-made support network.

One Targeted Individual included this image in his email to The Reporters Inc., asking for help. (We’ve blurred the identity of the pictured child.)
But what about the descriptions of physical pain, the actual burns and rashes on the skin, or the tinnitus and sound-sensitivity? To those claims, I say that the mind-body connection is a powerful thing. There are women, for example, who experience what’s called Phantom Pregnancy, and though not actually pregnant, display the symptoms of pregnancy, including a very distended, pregnant-looking belly, nausea, swollen breasts, increase in skin pigmentation, etc.
In an effort to show the power of the mind, my sixth-grade teacher once asked my class to think about having a canker sore, each day, over the course of a week. By the next week, about a quarter of the class had developed one! The power of suggestion, along with our expectations are that strong.
This power of suggestion and belief is called the Nocebo Effect, and according to a Wall Street Journal article on the subject, people who read about the possible side effects of medications are more likely to experience those side effects.
The Placebo Effect also demonstrates the power that the mind has over physical symptoms. According to a Harvard University blog, “The idea that your brain can convince your body a fake treatment is the real thing — the so-called Placebo Effect — and thus stimulate healing has been around for millennia. Now science has found that under the right circumstances, a placebo can be just as effective as traditional treatments.”
I once experienced my own placebo effect when, years ago, I went to a 30th birthday party during which many attendees seemed to get quite tipsy drinking Bloody Marys. Yet after the party, when I was helping clean up, we discovered that the vodka meant to be put in those drinks had never even been opened! The seal was still on the cap.
Similarly, when patients are told to take a pill that will reduce or illuminate their symptoms–even though it might just be a sugar pill—the Placebo Effect can actually manifest that physical improvement.
Nocebo and placebo effects, and particularly Phantom Pregnancies, demonstrate the plausibility that a person could also manifest bodily hurt or other symptoms, if they believe they’re being tortured.
What’s more, there are, and have been, mass mental illnesses—these days, the most prominent being eating disorders like bulimia and anorexia. While self-starvation (such as fasting) for religious reasons has been in existence for millennia, psychiatrists Miller and Pumariega see the dramatic increase in eating disorders in modern society as resulting from an increasingly interconnected world that subjects more people to the Western culture that emphasizes female body image and thinness. The result has been that an estimated 70 million thin and even emaciated people can look in the mirror and see a fat body, even as they’re starving to death.
Mass mental illness indeed.
DID THE MENTAL ILLNESS CONJURE THE TORTURE, OR DID THE TORTURE CAUSE MENTAL ILLNESS?
All that being said, there are a number of responses to our investigation like the following, in which respondents report experiencing stalking and/or physical symptoms before reading about them. In these cases, the TIs’ symptoms seem to have preceded the information they found that, they believe, provides a diagnosis of those symptoms:
“I’ve done a phenomenal amount of research into this topic over the past couple of years. My interest was sparked when, in 2019, I began experiencing many of the things reported by those who consider themselves victims of this type of clandestine targeting. Like others, I had no prior history of delusional mental illness, and the activity began when I was 41.”
This respondent went on to say, “Here is the big problem…If the methods used to harass an individual are so far beyond the ordinary scope of believability, it is quite easy for the victim to fall into a trap where they are left increasingly despondent from complaining about something which nobody else believes them about, and hence the negative outcome can stretch far beyond the activity itself.”
And from another TI, “It was not until the summer of 2022 that I first found people with similar experiences and saw the term ‘Gang Stalking.’ Nobody put in my head that these things happened, and I honestly believed my situation (the gang-stalking) was isolated.”
Other TIs write:
“I learned from the internet the names given for what I have been enduring for over two years.”
“I’m a targeted individual for a year now and was not aware that many thousands of people are being targeted. I thought that for the longest time it was my body having disruptive nights, but I connected the dots when I realized that every night an airplane would go by and I would become fully awakened and have my leg muscles contract.”
“Thank you thank you thank you. So much. I thought I was going crazy. I thought I was schizophrenic. But I’m forty. And so much of what you’ve written, is EXACTLY what I’ve been silently dealing with. I told my daughter about the voices in the fans. And I can’t have white noise on anymore. The voices get louder. The vehicles, sometimes park right outside the patio door. Mostly they park near the trash bin. Always facing us. The apartments on three sides of us, were empty and on the floor above us. But we could hear people moving, talking, showering etc. above us.”

photo illustration
“And that’s when this stuff started. It closely resembles schizophrenia, but it’s not. And the burning pains. Omg I’m just so glad I happened on this article. I’m so relieved I’m not alone. Not going crazy. But more relieved I’m not alone.”
Many TI messages we received report feelings of internal burning, pain in their organs, or an internal cutting feeling; they also claim to hear soft, vague voices in their heads. But then, their descriptions of what’s happening to them, and their beliefs about who’s responsible, often devolve into non-sensical (or less-sensical) rambles on unrelated subjects, or a list of unlikely villains.
Could it be that the symptoms these people initially experience are caused by an outside source that then leads them into mental confusion and paranoia? Are some people more sensitive to microwaves or electrical currents in our airwaves? Or, like the diplomats in Havana and China who suffered from what investigators believe were directed energy/microwaves, could these people be accidentally (or purposefully) in some line of “fire”?
Might these TI claims reflect the progress and resulting physical and/or mental damage of electronic exposure or torture? According to a World Health Organization report, “For some time, a number of individuals have reported a variety of health problems that they relate to exposure to electromagnetic field (EMF) sources. This reputed sensitivity to EMF has been generally termed “electromagnetic hypersensitivity” or EHS.” According to this report, estimates of the number of people experiencing what they believe are EHS symptoms vary dramatically, ranging from a few people per million to (according to a survey of self-help groups) many more, with 10 percent of those being severe cases.
Said one of our respondents, “I developed radio frequency sensitivity doing specific science experiments and developed all the classic symptoms, including temporary low white blood count (which cleared up), and ringing of the ears (that is worse when close to power lines). To this day. Cell towers bother me after the sensitivity developed.”
The WHO report goes on to say that “The symptoms most commonly experienced include dermatological symptoms (redness, tingling, and burning sensations) as well as neurasthenic and vegetative symptoms (fatigue, tiredness, concentration difficulties, dizziness, nausea, heart palpitation, and digestive disturbances). The symptoms are certainly real and can vary widely in their severity.” However, WHO also noted that studies conducted attempting to create these symptoms by exposing sensitive subjects to electromagnetic fields in controlled environments did not find a link between the symptoms and EMFs, and surmised that symptoms experienced by some EHS individuals might arise from environmental factors unrelated to EMF. Examples may include “flicker” from fluorescent lights, glare and other visual problems with video display units, and poor ergonomic design of computer workstations. Other factors that may play a role include poor indoor air quality or stress in the workplace or living environment.
The WHO report also states that there are “some indications that these symptoms may be due to pre-existing psychiatric conditions as well as stress reactions as a result of worrying about EMF health effects, rather than the EMF exposure itself.”
The power of the mind to create or exacerbate these symptoms is again called to task.
However, I’m still not convinced that the plethora of electromagnetic waves in the environment don’t have something to do with the confusion and delusions that some TIs experience—and I am relieved that, as WHO reports, this issue is beginning to get attention and study.
Until more data is in, I’ll continue to ask if it’s mental illness that causes TIs to feel tortured, or if it’s torture that causes them mental illness. A few emails aligned with my questions on this:
“I have experienced a few of the ‘characteristics’ that just about all TIs say they experience. It is very creepy indeed. What I would suggest is to research when, where, and how many people started with these complaints. Think about it like this, we have so many invisible signals for technology, almost in every home and vehicle, for so many different wireless actions, like Bluetooth. Just so so many of these “invisible connection lines” if you will. Perhaps some people’s brains are being interfered with in some way. Like scientists say, everything has frequencies, including our brains and nervous systems.”
“I think it is very important to develop protocols to distinguish between mental illness and a TI’s distress. Both are real, and the attacks on TIs are tailored to look like a mental illness.”
“They attack TIs mostly while sleeping, with pulsed electromagnetic radiation (RF, MW, etc.) from nearby apartments/buildings. These directed energy weapons, added to the consequent sleep deprivation, not only affect the person physically but also mentally. As a result, brain damage occurs sooner or later in most cases and the myriad physical/psychological trauma that victims experience every day is also a direct consequence of it.”
ONE THING IS CLEAR: TARGETED INDIVIDUALS ARE IN PAIN
Many of the TIs who responded to our investigation express suffering and pain, but often with no specifics regarding the type of pain, or cause of it:
“Being a TI is your worst nightmare. Only difference is it’s not a dream, it’s reality. It’s so torturing that you’ll wish you were dreaming. If you’re a TI, best advice I can give you is that if you don’t know God you better try, because that’s the only thing that’s gotten me through this and giving me the strength to continue to stand.”
“These days I struggle to keep it together. The only thing that keeps me going is the hope that my targeting will someday come to a close.”
And more heartbreakingly:
“Been going through this for 5 years +. It’ll drive you crazy to the point that I’m going eternally home.”
“I’m feeling so close to defeat and failure that I just don’t know what to do or why I do it anymore. I need help and hope by this may be catching someone’s eye that it will in turn prevent any person from ever having to suffer the same horrible and tragic happenings I have had to suffer. Please anyone, I beg for help. Thank you.”
“I have always been a loving and good person and so I don’t know why anyone would want to put me through so much pain.”
“It’s heartbreaking to have to go through this torture alone. Then to be labeled crazy.”
THE CATEGORIES
Even though The Reporters Inc. has, so far, received more than 400 responses from TIs commenting on our initial investigation, the responses that do not show obvious signs of mental illness make up, in my professional opinion, less than 20 percent.
In those responses, there are these commonalities:
1) They claim to have never had a mental health issue or a diagnosis.
2) They experience internal organ pain/internal burning.
3) They have other complaints of physical pain or mental confusion.
4) They have physical burns to their skin.
5) They experience heart disruption (heart racing or erratic).
6) They have tinnitus/ringing in one or both ears.
7) They witness strange happenings with household electronics.
8) They’re experiencing general stalking or gang stalking.
9) They see the same vehicles parked at or passing by their homes repeatedly, at a rate that they report is well above the norm.
10) They see laser-like beams.
11) They believe they’re being mentally manipulated (thoughts are inserted in their dreams, they receive subliminal messages, planted noises ramble about in their head, and/or they hear faint, audible words).
12) They see themselves as having been previously sane, but have now been driven to a legitimate psychiatric diagnosis by the mental torture.
MENTAL ILLNESS DEVELOPING ABNORMALLY LATE
All of the respondents who indicated their age, including those who, I believe, clearly have mental health issues, report being over 35, with the majority being 40-plus. In some cases (approximately 10 percent) the respondent’s age can be credibly ascertained as 40 or older based on information they provide about themselves, such as “retired” or “grandparent,” or statements like “It began during my first career…”
One female respondent wrote:
“I am 41 and I studied that mental disorders like schizophrenia and paranoia always have previous manifestation episodes during youth, so they do not happen suddenly in an adult population.”
While paranoia and other psychoses don’t always begin during youth, according to the Mayo Clinic “In most people with schizophrenia, symptoms start in the mid- to late 20s, though it can start later, up to the mid-30s.” What’s more, from my experience as a psychotherapist, loved ones of those with psychosis report that there were signs that the person was “different” going back to childhood.
Mental illness that does develop later in life is normally triggered by a major life stressor or trauma. Some respondents mention trauma such as divorce and child custody battles, and while these issues may have contributed to the person’s mental instability, the story from most is that “weird” or “painful things” simply began happening to them in the course of their normal day-to-day lives.
The 41-year-old respondent went on to say:
“My testimony is as follows: After multiple and simultaneous tech installations, indoor and outdoor in my neighborhood, laser-system beams started aiming directly at me in my home, in every room, even through walls and closed windows.
“Every person is able to tell when they’re having strange, never-felt-before kind of pain; so I put on a video-surveillance system inside my home, in every room. My cameras, in InfraRed remote mode, caught many pulsed laser beams and other signals that corresponded to the pulsed laser lights I was seeing, and that were hurting me.
“I attach here a few screens from my video-surveillance.”

The TI attached several photos to her email, including the one above. In it, she claims the faint white lines (that she points to with red arrows) are evidence of laser lights.
Her email continues:
“I did the MMPI-2 test (the international standard assessment for diagnosing mental illness), and I came out perfectly SANE and particularly level-headed. I can attach the medical report on that exam. I was diagnosed by a radiologist as having Havana Syndrome and being electro-sensitive…
“I had a neurologist check my brain by EEC (which measures brain activity) and CT scan, and everything is okay.
“Please, allow me to add a thought: it seems to me that there is now the same unwillingness or choice not to believe in something so horrible and dangerous for all humankind, as was the case during World War II when the news reported about concentration camps. People refused to believe it.”
This woman’s story has parallels and a similar feel to those of the women I profiled in our original TI article–and to those who have spent years surveying TIs (such as physician and author Dr. John Hall who maintains in his book A New Breed: Satellite Terrorism in America, that the vast majority of TIs are women over the age of 40.)
Is there a certain sensitivity to atmospheric electrical waves in this group? If so, the “why” remains a mystery.
7 Warning Signs You Are Suffering from Emotional ShockLast reviewed by Dr. Sheri JacobsonSeptember 23, 2022 By Andrea M. Darcy Emotional shock hits all of us at one point or another. It’s in those moments after we live through something hard or challenging. We keep rationalising what happened, and telling ourselves to just ‘get over it’. But we can’t snap out of feeling strange and unsettled, no matter how hard we try. WHAT IS ’EMOTIONAL SHOCK’? It is not actually a clinical diagnosis, but just a popular term. That said mental health professionals may use the term to help you understand your overwhelmed state after a difficult event. And it’s not ‘bad’. Emotional shock is actually your mind and body’s normal and healthy way of processing difficult experiences. As the NHS says in their guide ‘Understanding Reactions to Traumatic Events’, “After experiencing or witnessing a frightening or traumatic event, it is common for people to experience strong physical feelings and emotions and/or to find that they are behaving differently. This may happen straight away or for some people it may be several weeks or months later that reactions occur. These are normal and for the majority of people they start to fade and settle down within a few months.” The problem arises if emotional shock triggers previous life trauma, anxiety we already struggled with, or if it evolves into a more serious mental health issue. 7 SIGNS YOU ARE SUFFERING EMOTIONAL SHOCK 1. You feel afraid. Something has happened that you didn’t expect, weren’t prepared for, and couldn’t prevent happening. Suddenly, life feels dangerous and unpredictable. If you are already an anxiety sufferer, you might find yourself with anxiety attacks. photo by Mochammad Algi for Pexels 2. You can’t think straight. You might feel as if your brain has turned to mush, or you have ‘brain fog‘. Life might even feel unreal, as if you are disconnected and floating slightly outside of your body, watching yourself carry on doing things. 3. You are experiencing physical side effects. When your brain decides that there is ‘danger’ around, it triggers the primal ‘fight, flight, or freeze’ response. This sends a cocktail of chemicals and hormones through your body that can manifest as things like a racing heartbeat, muscle tension, headaches, stomach upset, and random aches and pains. 4. You feel strangely exhausted. Sleep is often affected when we experience stressful things. Insomnia is common. Although for some people stress makes them sleep more than ever, even if might be a disturbed sleep, full of dreams. 5. You are all over the place. When the mind is struggling to make sense of a difficult situation, it doesn’t leave much headspace to deal with everything else that needs our attention. The stress of a shock can also leave us illogic and emotional. In one moment we think, “I am bigger than this”, and we feel powerful. In the next we are lost to victim thinking, feeling sorry for ourselves and crying. There can also be a cycle of guilt (it’s all my fault), shame (what will people think), and blame (I hate them for doing this to me). 6. You feel like (and are acting like) photo by Jalil Saeidi for Pexels someone else entirely. You could suffer a bit of a temporary personality change after a shock. If you are usually social, you might just want to be alone and hide out at home. Or if you are often the sort to take time out by yourself and be practical, you might find yourself going out every night, drinking when you usually don’t. Compulsive behaviours can also be a problem. 7. Things just seem, well…. pointless. When something happens that leaves us deeply upset, life can temporarily lose its meaning. We can have negative thoughts like, ‘Why bother, when everything is just going to go wrong?”. WHEN WILL MY EMOTIONAL SHOCK STOP? Traumatic experiences will interact with your personal vulnerabilities and the any unresolved difficult experiences in your past. This means you will have your own unique timeline for getting over shock. If, for example, you already lost your job this year, and now have had an accident that left you injured, you might take more time to feel better than someone who just had an injury. So some people recover from emotional shock in several hours. Others in several days, and some in several weeks. And for some, depending on what they go through, shock can even go on for six weeks or more. Note that it is also possible to experience ‘delayed’ emotional shock. So you might think an event has not upset you, only to feel symptoms days or weeks later. IT’S MONTHS LATER AND I STILL FEEL BAD Is it months after the fact, and you still are having symptoms like the above? It’s possible that you have developed acute stress disorder or even post-traumatic stress disorder. This can happen if your shocking experience triggered old, unresolved experiences, or was just simply too shocking for your particular brain to process. It’s time to seek support if this is you. [Read our article on “Emotional Shock vs Acute Stress Disorder vs PTSD” for more.] BUT I HAVE FELT LIKE THE ABOVE MY ENTIRE LIFE “The symptoms of emotional shock describe what I’ve been acting like for years if not my entire life. Is it possible I am living in a state of endless psychological shock?!” Some individuals lead their life in a sort of ‘extended shock’ after traumatic childhood experiences. Or because their childhood was full of difficulties, called ‘adverse childhood experiences‘, or ACEs, in psychology. As adults they might be constantly anxious, have sleep problems, feel unable to have close relationships, or even exhibit signs of Adult ADHD, including extreme distraction and an inability to think clearly. This sort of ‘long-term shock’ is now starting to be be diagnosed as its own form of PTSD, called complex PTSD, or ‘c-PTSD’. If you think this is you, do seek support. Working with a counsellor or psychotherapist can help you gently and carefully uncover your past trauma, while learning how to lessen its control over your life. [Read more in our article, “What therapies work for trauma?“]. BE GENTLE WITH YOURSELF The important thing with psychological shock is to be gentle with yourself and not judge yourself. There is not a ‘right’ or ‘wrong’ way to respond to traumatic events, and again, we all get better within our own timeline. What matters is that you allow yourself the time to heal, practice good self-care, and get support if you need it. Ready to reach out for help? We connect you with London’s top psychologists with experience in trauma and shock counselling. Not in London or the UK? Our booking site helps you select an online therapist registered and located throughout the UK who you can talk to from anywhere. Has this article on emotional shock and acute stress reaction been helpful to you? Do share. Have questions? Comment below, we love hearing from you. Andrea M. Darcy is the lead writer of this site, building it from a handful of visitors to over three million a year. Trained in coaching and person-centred therapy, she herself is no stranger to living with c-PTSD.
This website and its content is copyright of Harley Therapy Ltd. – © 2006-2025 https://www.harleytherapy.co.uk/. All rights reserved.

