Lockdown

LFN Takes Government to Court: Vaccines, Lockdown, IHR and Schools on Trial

In just one month, Liberty Fighters Network (LFN) has lodged four major High Court applications in Pretoria — three of them in the past week alone. These cases, ignored by mainstream media, tackle issues that affect every South African.

LFN is challenging the mass poultry vaccination decision by Agriculture Minister John Steenhuisen, exposing the lack of consultation and transparency; demanding confirmation that the COVID-19 National State of Disaster ended on 14 June 2020, and that all extensions thereafter were unlawful; seeking to stop government from secretly implementing the 2024 WHO International Health Regulations amendments without Parliament or public input; and fighting against the Draft School Admission Regulations, which threaten children’s and parents’ constitutional rights.

Each case is about holding government accountable, defending our Constitution, and protecting ordinary people from abuse of power. LFN runs entirely on voluntary donations — if you share our mission, kindly consider contributing to help us continue these vital battles.

NEWS RELEASE: LFN Back in Court: Lockdown Extensions Were Invalid, Billions in Damages Possible

LFN has once again taken the fight to court. On 28 August 2025 we lodged a landmark application proving that the National State of Disaster legally ended on 14 June 2020 — and that every extension thereafter was unlawful. With three of the four COVID-19 vaccines now deregistered and hundreds of South Africans already coming forward with claims of loss, this case could open the way for billions in compensation. Download the full application from our website and see for yourself why this may become one of the most important constitutional battles in South Africa’s history.

LFN Files Landmark Challenge: COVID-19 Disaster Extensions Were Unlawful

LFN is heading to court to challenge the legality of all lockdown extensions after 14 June 2020 — based on fatal miscalculations that rendered every one of them unlawful.

This landmark case could open the door to billions in damages claims, with LFN seeking class action certification on behalf of affected South Africans.

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