Spaza shop owners see improvement in sales
Spaza shop owners in townships around Durban and Pietermaritzburg say they have seen an improvement in sales in recent weeks. Many attribute this to the nationwide action against undocumented foreign nationals, which saw many informal businesses and spaza shops in townships and cities - owned by foreign nationals - close due to the tensions. In some instances foreign-owned shops shut their doors entirely, while others resumed business in the days following the 30th of June protest marches. For more news, visit sabcnews.com and #SABCNews on all Social Media platforms.

▶︎
Klarinet community demands removal of foreign national shops

▶︎
Frankreich – Marokko Highlights | Viertelfinale, FIFA WM 2026 | sportstudio

▶︎
Neelam9728 is live

▶︎
Once Upon a Time in the West Best Scenes 🌀 4K

▶︎
It's Topical | Top six political parties debate immigration in SA

▶︎
Returnees share first-hand accounts of South Africa xenophobic violence

▶︎
How the US blunder in Iran accelerates its decline and dooms Israel | Andreas Krieg | UNAPOLOGETIC

▶︎
LIVE | Madlanga Commission of Inquiry

▶︎
NEW TWIST: Things Just Got UGLY for Malema Over Mashazi

▶︎
Madlanga Commission of Inquiry Day 129 | Tuesday, 30 June 2026

▶︎
Nigeria Finally Reacts! Oshiomhole Wants South African Companies' Profits Seized

▶︎
South Africa's Xenophobia Crisis Just Took a Turn For The Worst—And It Changes Everything

▶︎
Dr. Imogen Mashazi and Linda Gxasheka will spend the night behind bars

▶︎
Sovereign Citizen Refuses to Answer Judge… Gets Hit With Instant Jail Warning in Court

▶︎
SOUTH AFRICANS MUST LEAVE UGANDA! Ugandans Ask Both Legal And Illegal SAs To Leave By 1 August

▶︎
Fraud-corruption case linked to 'Cat' Matlala unpacked

▶︎
Mobs hunting foreigners in South African neighbourhoods as anti-immigration protests turn violent

▶︎
Residents challenge hiring of foreign nationals

▶︎
Immigration Crisis | March organisers report back to community members

▶︎
