Monday, June 01

100 Zimbabweans Arrested No Papers In South Africa

More than 100 Zimbabweans seeking shelter after xenophobic attacks in Addo were arrested on Sunday.

Some had been evacuated to a safe space in Gqeberha and others were camping out at Addo police station when they were arrested by Home Affairs officials for violating immigration laws.

The attacks in Addo last weekend left at least four people dead and more than ten injured. Hundreds of families fled their homes.

According to the Zimbabwe Migrants Support Network (ZiMSN) chairperson Chris Mapingure, 127 people have now opted for voluntary repatriation after appearing in the Kirkwood Magistrates' Court on Monday.

The Zimbabwean consulate is arranging transport back to Zimbabwe.

Mapingure condemned the arrests coming so soon after the xenophobic attacks. "People had lost loved ones and some lost their property. Most lost their travel documents and will need time and money to replace the documents. This is unfair and unfortunate. People were supposed to be given an opportunity to collect their belongings and time to mourn and bury the dead."

Police spokesperson Captain Andre Beetge told GroundUp that the arrests were conducted by immigration officers from the Department of Home Affairs and the South African Police Service only provided the holding cells.

The deadly xenophobic attacks last weekend are under investigation by police. There have been no arrests. Warrant officer Majola Nkohli told GroundUp charges of intimidation and conspiracy to commit crime had been added to the docket. "There is information coming out, some in the form of voice notes, which have been elements of intimidation and conspiracy to commit crime during the unrest," Nkohli said.

The leader of the South African National Civic Organisation (SANCO) in the Sundays River Valley, Patrick Bayeni, said the situation in Addo has calmed down and it is safe for the remaining Zimbabwean families to return.

"We have members on the ground there to monitor the situation and assure whoever wants to return to come back without any fear," he said.

He said the father of the South African man whose murder triggered the violent "revenge" attacks has also urged the community not to harm immigrant community members.

GroundUp sent questions to the Department of Home Affairs and Minister of Home Affairs Leon Schreiber but had received no response at the time of publication.

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Class Action Lawsuit Lawyer: How Group Claims Work

A class action lawsuit allows many people with similar claims to sue a company or organization together. These cases may involve defective products, data breaches, consumer fraud, employment violations, dangerous drugs, financial misconduct, or privacy violations.

A class action lawyer represents the group, also called the class. Instead of each person filing a separate lawsuit, the claims are combined into one case.

Class actions can be powerful because they allow ordinary consumers or workers to challenge large companies. They can also make legal action possible when individual damages are too small to justify separate lawsuits.

If the case settles or wins, class members may receive payment, refunds, services, or other benefits.

Not every claim qualifies for class action treatment. The court must usually decide whether the case meets certain requirements, including common issues among class members.

If you receive notice of a class action, read it carefully. You may need to file a claim, opt out, or object by a deadline.

A class action lawyer can explain whether your situation may qualify for a group claim.

How to Join a Class Action Lawsuit: Step-by-Step Guide

How to Join a Class Action Lawsuit

If you received an email, postcard, letter, or online notice about a class action lawsuit, you may be wondering what to do next.

Do you need to sign up?

Will you get money?

Is it real?

Do you need a lawyer?

Joining a class action lawsuit can be simple in some cases, but you need to read the notice carefully. Every case has its own rules, deadlines, and eligibility requirements.

What Does It Mean to Join a Class Action?

In many class actions, people who fit the class definition are automatically included unless they choose to opt out.

In settlement cases, you may need to file a claim form to receive money or benefits.

A class action notice usually explains:

Who is included
What the lawsuit is about
What the settlement provides
Whether you must file a claim
How to object
How to opt out
Important deadlines
Where to get more information

Step 1: Confirm the Notice Is Real

Class action scams exist. Before giving personal information, verify the settlement.

Look for:

Official settlement website
Court name and case number
Settlement administrator
Law firm names
Court documents
Clear deadline information
No demand for payment

The FTC says it never asks people to pay to file a claim or get a refund.

Step 2: Read the Class Definition

The class definition tells you whether you are included.

For example, a settlement may apply to people who:

Bought a product during certain dates
Used a service in a specific state
Had personal data exposed
Paid certain fees
Worked for a company during a specific period
Owned stock during a certain time
Received unwanted calls or texts

If you do not fit the definition, you may not qualify.

Step 3: Check the Deadline

Deadlines matter.

A notice may include deadlines to:

File a claim
Opt out
Object
Submit documents
Update payment information
Attend a fairness hearing

If you miss the deadline, you may lose your chance to receive benefits or preserve certain rights.

Step 4: Decide Whether to File a Claim

Some settlements require a claim form. Others may send automatic payments.

A claim form may ask for:

Name
Contact information
Proof of purchase
Account information
Dates of service
Payment method
Documentation of loss
Attestation under penalty of perjury

Only submit truthful information.

Step 5: Understand Your Options

A class action notice may give you several options.

File a Claim

You may receive money, credit, services, repairs, or other benefits if approved.

Do Nothing

If you do nothing, you may receive nothing but still give up certain legal rights.

Opt Out

Opting out usually means you will not receive settlement benefits, but you may keep the right to sue separately.

Object

Objecting means you stay in the class but tell the court you disagree with part of the settlement.

Step 6: Keep Records

Save:

Settlement notice
Claim confirmation
Emails
Claim number
Proof of submission
Payment records
Documents you uploaded

If there is a problem later, records can help.

Do You Need a Lawyer to Join?

For many settlements, you do not need your own lawyer to submit a claim.

However, you may want legal advice if:

You suffered large damages
You are unsure whether to opt out
You have a separate lawsuit
You disagree with the settlement
You received a complicated notice
You are asked to sign legal documents
You are part of a business or investor claim

How Long Does Payment Take?

Class action settlements can take time.

Even after a settlement is announced, the court may need to approve it. Appeals can delay payment. Claim administrators also need time to review claims.

Do not expect instant payment.

The FTC explains that refund programs may involve review and distributions, and if money remains after a first distribution, a second round may sometimes be sent.

What If You Never Received a Notice?

You may still be eligible if you fit the class definition. Notices do not always reach everyone.

You can search:

Settlement websites
Court records
Consumer protection pages
Official claim administrator pages
Law firm announcements
Government refund program pages

Be careful with unofficial websites that collect personal information.

Final Thoughts

Joining a class action lawsuit usually starts with reading the notice carefully.

Check whether the settlement is real, confirm that you qualify, review the deadlines, and decide whether to file a claim, opt out, object, or do nothing.

When in doubt, speak with a qualified attorney before giving up legal rights.