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South African police say death of Nigerian man not linked to anti-migrant violence

By Thomson Reuters Jul 7, 2026 | 4:55 AM

JOHANNESBURG, July 7 (Reuters) – South African police said on Tuesday the death of a Nigerian man in custody late last month had ​nothing to do with a surge in ‌anti-migrant violence and that he collapsed after being arrested for drug possession.

Nigeria’s foreign ministry alleged on Sunday the man had died during an interrogation by South African police ‌two ​days before nationwide rallies against ⁠undocumented migrants, threatening unspecified ⁠action if there were more attacks on its citizens.

“The South African Police Service strongly rejects attempts to link this incident to anti-illegal immigrant protests,” ​a police spokesperson said in a statement.

The spokesperson said a police drugs team had arrested ⁠the Nigerian at his apartment ⁠in an intelligence-driven operation. Drugs were ​found at the scene, and the man collapsed while ​being taken into custody in a Pretoria police ‌station, the spokesperson added.

Paramedics were called and declared him dead, and a police watchdog was notified and will investigate the incident, the spokesperson said.

South ⁠Africa’s foreign ministry has said Nigeria’s government should send in any evidence it has about the man’s death but ⁠has not ‌commented on the specific allegations made ⁠by its Nigerian counterpart.

The anti-migrant protests ​over the ‌past few months have been mostly ​peaceful but ⁠at times turned violent, with attacks on foreign nationals and looting of foreign-owned shops.

Rights groups say foreigners are being used as scapegoats for deep-rooted problems like crime and unemployment.

(Reporting by Alexander Winning; Editing by ​Kate Mayberry)