The National - News

SA street food industry under threat after listeriosi­s outbreak

▶ Disease linked to Tiger Brands’ popular processed meat product, polony

- GAVIN DU VENAGE

South Africa is battling a deadly outbreak of food poisoning that has been traced to some of the country’s most popular grocery items.

The bacterial infection listeriosi­s has killed at least 180 people, and local scientists have linked the outbreak to a cold meats factory owned by the country’s largest food processor, Tiger Brands. With a market value of around 80 billion rand (Dh24.53bn), Johannesbu­rg-listed Tiger produces everything from canned goods to baby food, pasta and sausages.

At first, the company denied its plant was involved, but government scientists compared DNA samples taken from listeriosi­s victims to samples found at the plant.

“These are very dangerous circumstan­ces for a company,” said Wayne McCurrie, Fund Manager at Ashburton Investment­s in Johannesbu­rg, which owns Tiger Brands shares.

“This must be handled with great care and with responsibi­lity.” This past week the company finally conceded its products were involved, and issued a recall.

“We are well advanced in the national recall of all ready-toeat chilled processed meat products,” said Lawrence MacDougall, chief executive of Tiger Brands. “We will leave no stone unturned to get to the bottom of this to ensure it does not happen again.”

The ground zero appears to be a range of popular meat snacks known locally as polony. It is cheap, and often sold by street vendors. Polony, known as bologna in the rest of the world, is often fried and eaten with bread, or simply eaten cold directly from the packaging.

It is especially consumed by labourers, in a form of street food known as “kota” – a combinatio­n of polony, bread, fries and sauce. Street selling is an industry in itself. In 2016, a survey by a local financial publicatio­n Business Times found that informal sellers of fast food delicacies were collective­ly valued at about 10bn rand. This is now under threat, unless the outbreak is quickly contained.

Health Minister Aaron Motsoaledi has called on people to avoid street food until the outbreak is contained.

“If you are used to eating kota and all that, just wait a bit. At least for now.” He urged people to be more aware of personal hygiene and to wash their hands before cooking. In the meantime, Tiger’s troubles are just beginning.

Lawyers are preparing a class action lawsuit on behalf of listeriosi­s victims. According to The National Institute for Communicab­le Diseases, almost 1,000 cases have been detected so far, including the 180 or so who died from the disease.

The foods Tiger Brands produces are staples, attorney Richard Spoor, who is preparing the lawsuit, said in a statement on social media. “Processed meat is one of the cheapest forms of protein available to poor people and it is perfectly good to eat if the appropriat­e food safety measures are taken.

“The complaint is that Tiger Brands failed to ensure that the read-to-eat food that they sold was safe to eat,” he said.

The South African processed meat market grew about 8 per cent in 2017 to a retail value of $412 million, according to Reuters, quoting Euromonito­r Internatio­nal figures. Tiger Brands has a 35.7 per cent local market share.

The lawsuit comes just as the company is shaking off the effects of a disastrous venture into Nigeria. In 2012, it acquired Dangote Flour, but by 2016 had exited what had been a sinkhole of money and was forced to write down 2.2bn rand in the process.

Apart from the lawsuit, many of its export markets such as the UAE have temporaril­y halted imports of South African-origin export meats. Of particular concern are the African countries that form the bulk of Tiger’s export market, where the disease may as yet go undetected.

An emergency meeting of the 16-member Southern Africa Developmen­t Council has been held, and several of South Africa’s neighbours have already banned imports of at-risk items.

However, porous borders and lack of capacity make detection of suspect items difficult.

So far, only Namibia has reported a case of the disease, which kills up to one in five people infected.

Mr Motsoaledi told local news website Times Live following the SADC meeting: “It did arise in the meeting that countries might not be able to detect something like this.”

These are very dangerous circumstan­ces for a company. This must be handled with great care and with responsibi­lity WAYNE MCCURRIE Fund manager, Ashburton Investment­s

 ??  ?? A couple leaves a Tiger Brands factory shop in Germiston, South Africa. The company is in the midst of a massive recall
A couple leaves a Tiger Brands factory shop in Germiston, South Africa. The company is in the midst of a massive recall

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