A Pretoria man says his life has been turned upside down after he was falsely identified as the man who aggressively grabbed a woman and threatened to assault her at a Spur restaurant in Johannesburg.

The incident happened at the Texamo Spur at the Glen Shopping Centre at the weekend.

Jacque Payne’s number and home address were published on Twitter and both were alleged to belong to Nico Viljoen‚ the man implicated in the Spur brawl.

Payne said his phone hasn’t stopped ringing.

“We have been receiving death threats and I don’t even know who Nico Viljoen is. I haven’t even been to Joburg in two or three years‚” Payne told Times Media.

Spur apologises after CCTV footage shows man aggressively grabbed woman's child Spur Corporation issued an unequivocal apology on Wednesday to a mother who was threatened with a “klap” by a fellow diner during a heated argument over their children at the weekend.

“My family and I can’t even move. We have nowhere to go‚” he added.

He believes the person who posted his contact details on social media is a Telkom employee.

Payne has tried all avenues to resolve the issue but he claimed the police were unable to assist.

His mother‚ Anneline‚ took to Facebook to vent her frustration.

“If I find Nico Viljoen‚ he will regret being born. We as a family have been to hell and back today because of the Spur incident. We have had over 400 calls‚ some great people were spoken to‚ some not so nice‚” Anneline Payne wrote.

“We distance ourselves from Nico Viljoen. We have no idea who or where he is‚” she said.

She begged for people to stop calling her son‚ adding that they were being unfairly harassed.