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Dlamini-Zuma again given five days to amend lockdown regulations

Judge agrees with ‘absurdity’ of beach ban LFN pointed to the ridiculousness of banning beach visits in its campaign to contain the spread of the virus, and claimed the science behind mask-wearing is unconvincing. The group also wants the ban on religious gatherings overturned, though Judge Davis said this had been rendered moot by the latest amendment to the lockdown regulations allowing for church gatherings up to certain limits. Despite a judgment that appears to go heavily against LFN, Davis did agree with some aspects of the LFN case, such as the “absurdity” of the beach ban, which has since been lifted.

South-africa
Nkosazana
Kwazulu-natal
Pretoria
Gauteng
South-african
Leonard-benjamin
Norman-davis
Supreme-court
Traditional-affairs-nkosazana-dlamini-zuma
Pretoria-high-court
Reyno-de-beer

Lawsuit shows that banks auction repossessed homes for a fraction of their value

Banks sell repossessed houses for cents in the rand

File image PROPERTY NEWS - It’s been known for years that the banks have been flogging off repossessed properties for a fraction of their market worth, but the evidence was anecdotal and fragmented. Not anymore. An affidavit filed in support of the R60 billion class action suit brought by Lungelo Ditokelo Human Rights Foundation against the major banks, based on a sample of about 12 000 repossessed properties, found that these properties were sold for 50-60% of their proper value, mainly through sheriff’s auctions. The class action suit, which is being defended by the banks, seeks to recover billions of rands in lost home equity as a result of this practice.

South-africa
United-kingdom
South-african
Leonard-benjamin
Douglas-shaw
King-sibiya
Garth-zietsman
Lungelo-ditokelo-human-rights-foundation
Department-of-justice
National-credit-regulator
Standard-bank
National-credit

Repo frenzy hits SA

Picture: iStock Government appears to have little concern for the plight of South Africans now at risk of losing their houses and cars. It was disclosed in Transaction Capital’s recent year-end results that as at June 2020, 23% of vehicle and mortgage accounts were in arrears, as were 77% of unsecured lending accounts. ‘Humanitarian crisis’ “This is a humanitarian crisis and yet we continue like it’s business as usual, as if consumers fell into arrears out of their own neglect,” says King Sibiya, CEO of Lungelo Ditokelo Human Rights Foundation, which provides legal defence against unlawful evictions by the banks. Sibiya says the.

South-africa
Berlin
Germany
South-african
South-africans
Leonard-benjamin
King-sibiya
Lungelo-ditokelohuman-rights-foundation
Transaction-capital
பெர்லின்
ஜெர்மனி
லியோனார்ட்-பெஞ்சமின்

Watch out for a repo frenzy

MONEYWEB app instead? Watch out for a repo frenzy A blizzard of summonses has hit consumers who fell into arrears during lockdown. The advice from consumer advocates: defend these and tell your side of the story to the court. 00:01  Open: Start paying whatever you can as soon as you can – judges view such attempts in a very positive light. Image: Shutterstock There won’t be much Christmas cheer for thousands of South Africans who fell into arrears on their mortgages and vehicle payments through no fault of their own. The banks extended a three-month repayment holiday at the start of the lockdown, but started cranking out the summonses as soon as it was over. Household incomes across the board have been hammered by the lockdowns and there’s little prospect of catching up on these arrears.

South-africa
United-kingdom
Berlin
Germany
South-african
South-africans
Leonard-benjamin
King-sibiya
National-credit
Lungelo-ditokelohuman-rights-foundation
Transaction-capital
National-credit-act

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