Summary At least 80 shops, most of them owned by Somalis, have been looted over the past three days
JOHANNESBURG (AFP) - South African police said Thursday they arrested 92 people after mobs went on a looting spree of grocery stores owned by foreign nationals in Johannesburg s Soweto township.
The violence erupted after a foreign shopkeeper shot dead a teenager who had tried to rob him on Monday night in the iconic township.
"Young boys wanted to rob a shop and the owner opened fire and killed one of them," police spokesman Kay Makhubela told AFP. "That made the community angry, and that s what started all this."
At least 80 shops, most of them owned by Somalis, have been looted over the past three days, he said.
In a statement late Thursday, police reported a "further deployment of a large contingent" of officers to Soweto. which was a crucible of the fight against apartheid.
Of those arrested 83 are facing public violence charges, one is being held for murder while eight will answer firearms charges.
A second person was killed on Wednesday night, and police said they were still investigating the circumstances.
Amid widespread poverty and unemployment, frustration in Johannesburg s run-down neighbourhoods often boils over into anti-immigrant violence.
In 2008, deadly xenophobic violence broke out around Johannesburg townships, killing 62 people.
