The Star Late Edition

Justice delayed for listeriosi­s victims

- FATHER STAN MUYEBE Father Stan Muyebe is director of the Justice and Peace Commission of the Southern African Catholic Bishops’ Conference. He writes in his personal capacity.

FIVE years ago, the former health minister Dr Aaron Motsoaledi announced that Tiger Brands’ Polokwane meat processing facility was the source of the biggest listeriosi­s outbreak South Africa had ever seen.

Thousands of people were harmed as a result of consuming processed meat produced at a Tiger Brands factory, and over 200 people died. Many are still awaiting justice.

The fatal infection, which is harmful to mostly vulnerable people, including children, the elderly and pregnant women, first broke out around the end of 2016. It was declared an outbreak in January 2017, and in early 2018 the National Institute for Communicab­le Diseases (NICD) and the World Health Organizati­on confirmed that they found traces of the ST6 genetic variant of listeria in a Tiger Brands’ facility in Polokwane. Meat products produced by Tiger Brands were recalled from the shelves.

Tiger Brands confirmed traces of the ST6 genetic variant of listeria at its Polokwane facility after doing its own lab tests. In 2018, Richard Spoor Attorneys Incorporat­ed (RSI) and LHL Attorneys Incorporat­ed launched a class action against Tiger Brands to ensure that victims of listeriosi­s or families of victims of listeriosi­s are fairly compensate­d.

Tiger Brands said that it would co-operate with the legal processes, as is expected of it as a South African company. Tiger Brands, however, continues to deny that it is legally liable for the harm.

Thousands of people were infected by listeriosi­s, and many are still suffering from the effects of the deadly disease. As a priest, I have had an opportunit­y to meet some of the victims of the listeriosi­s outbreak and experience their pain and suffering. They are not just numbers – they are real people suffering real-life consequenc­es.

For example, children who were born with listeriosi­s have chronic neurologic­al disorders and need ongoing medical care. One of the class representa­tives in the litigation is Baby T, who contracted the infection while in her mother’s womb in 2017. Baby T suffers from a condition that causes swelling around the brain. Baby T’s treatment is coming at a great cost to her family.

I find it morally unacceptab­le that the victims of the listeriosi­s outbreak have been made to wait for five years without relief and conclusion of the class action lawsuit.

For the sake of victims, some of whom belong to the poorest of the poor, I therefore make an ethical appeal to Tiger Brands and all stakeholde­rs, including the NICD, to work together to expedite the case and ensure it is concluded this year.

To build a society based on respect for human dignity, it is important that ethical corporate citizenshi­p, and not only the narrow legal and financial interests, guide the way companies handle incidents in which hundreds of customers are allegedly harmed by its products. Tiger Brands’ own Ethics and Governance Policy states that it will protect and respect human rights.

This policy calls on Tiger Brands to do its due diligence to identify risks or identify where potential human rights issues could occur in its operations.

I also make a moral appeal that considerat­ion be made to a negotiated settlement that ensures fair compensati­on for the victims.

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