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Foreign grocers face xenophobia in South Africa after child food poisoning deaths

While there was no sign of a deliberate campaign to poison children, vigilantes have targeted Ethiopian and South Asian shopkeepers

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A worker speaks with a customer at a spaza shop in Soweto, South Africa, on November 12. Photo: AFP

The deaths of 23 children around Johannesburg this year from suspected food poisoning has ignited anger in South Africa against foreign nationals who run small corner shops known as spazas.

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There is still police tape around a now-closed spaza shop in Soweto’s Naledi area that allegedly sold snacks to six young children who died from poisoning in October.

The tragedy angered local residents who attacked and looted the spaza and hounded out the shopkeeper, reportedly an Ethiopian national. Even the person renting out the premises fled in fear.

An autopsy revealed that a pesticide had caused the deaths, and a link to the shop has not been officially established.

As similar cases were reported in other areas, the outcry mounted, leading authorities to launch raids on foreign-run spazas to check compliance with laws and regulations.

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Several have been forced to shut and the shopkeepers – generally from Ethiopia, India and Pakistan – have fled.

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