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Samaritan | Zikoko!
  • A Nigerian Police Officer Returns Lost Items to Owner… With Everything Intact
    We often think that humanity is a lost cause, but then something happens and you’re given a reason to believe that there’s still hope. In Nigeria, the saying “The Police is your friend” is actually ironic.
    Nobody believes it. Coming across a good, selfless police officer is the same as seeing a blue moon. But something happened recently that impressed us and we’re sure it’ll impress you too.

    Remember Edward Ezekiel Onoriode, the police officer who defuses bombs for a living?

    He’s the stuff of Hollywood action movies are made of.

    Edward has given us another reason to love police officers.

    He discovered a purse, at Ikeja Shopping Mall, containing valuables and really expensive items such as: cash in local and foreign currencies, recharge cards worth N2000, nine ATM cards, international passport, international and local drivers licenses, a national ID card, voters card and a gold necklace. Edward had the opportunity to keep everything for himself, or return the purse with some articles missing and he would’t be held accountable if he said that he found it that way. But he got in contact with and returned the purse to the owner.
    The lady who couldn’t believe her luck offered Edward monetary compensation, which he promptly turned down, because he believes “It’s good to do the right thing, not because of any reward that comes with it, but because its the right thing to do.”

    Could any police officer get better than that?

    Read the full story below.
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    I was at Ikeja shopping mall two days ago on duty where I recovered a missing purse at the parking lot. The purse…
    Posted by Edward Ezekiel Onoriode on Friday, December 4, 2015
    I was at Ikeja shopping mall two days ago on duty where I recovered a missing purse at the parking lot. The purse contained; some cash both local and foreign currencies, recharge cards worth about N2000, nine ATM cards, complementary cards, valuable documents, international passport, international and local drivers license, national ID card, voters card and a gold necklace. I took the missing purse to the security office where all lost but found items are being kept for the owners to claim should in case the owners lodge a formal complaint that their items at the mall went missing for possibly claim after identification. At the security office where we went through all the items inside the purse for record purpose, one of the security men told me point blank that if he’s the one that recovered the missing purse, he’d remove the money, gold necklace and recharge card before bringing the purse to the office for record purpose. I wasn’t disappointed with his misguided speech because that’s the normal character of most Nigerians when they recover a missing item. Somehow, I decide to trace the owner of the purse via her complimentary card and put a call across to her. Open receiving the call, she screamed at the background jubilating that her missing purse has been recovered. She drove straight to the mall, tracing me through my mobile number I used in calling her. When we met, she didn’t mind we were in public, she gave me a warm hug and thanked me and prayed for me. I took her to the office where the purse was kept. She checked her purse and discovered that nothing was missing. She was astonished. She asked me again if I was the one that saw the item and I said yes. She told me that she was already in the bank filling forms to block her ATM cards. She said in those ATM cards, she have over N200m in there and the necklace in the purse is valued at N1.8m. She also said, I just removed a heavy burden from her neck because life would have been miserable for her missing her international passport, international and local drivers licence including other documents. She kept thanking me and almost knelling down. She was awed and she told me that she least expected a Police officer to recover a missing item containing cash and still return that missing item intact without removing a dime out of it mostly in this harsh economy. She kept staring at me like am a God. To cut the long story short, she gave me some cash which I rejected. I told her am doing my job and taking money from her for recovering her missing purse is wrong on my part. I also made her to understand that we can become friends and maybe in the future she can appreciate my nice gesture to her but I won’t take anything from her for doing my job at the moment. She became speechless and asked me which church am i attending? I smiled and told her “am irreligious. In fact, am a freethinker” that’s the exact words I told her. She stood their for minutes without knowing the next word to say. Anyway, we are now friends and she just introduced me to her husband this morning on phone. Her husband was so excited and has invited me and my family to join them on a dinner in any of my off days. Is good to do the right thing not because of any reward that comes with it but because its the right thing to do. NOTE: IF ANY OF YOU ARE IN DOUBT OF THIS STORY, THE ADDRESS WHERE THIS INCIDENCE TOOK PLACE IS IKEJA SHOPPING MALL ALAUSA LAGOS. GO THERE AND INVESTIGATE RIGHT FROM THE ENTRANCE GATE AND THE SECURITY STAND. Good morning.

    As Edward says,

    Your being in uniform is to protect the lives of civilians while the civilians are to pay you via tax to the government that employed you. You don’t disrespect those that pay you so, respect the civilians and they’d respect you in return.

    Edward and his family has made two friends for life.

    We hope that Edward will serve as a poster boy for police officers everywhere.

  • This Nigerian Man Helps Out a Stranger and the Story is Incredibly Touching
    Whoever said that Nigerians aren’t good samaritans isn’t being truthful! Ken Davidson, a Nigerian man at the airport in Toronto, Canada was going about his business when he saw a wheelchair-bound old woman, who didn’t speak or understand much English, about to get in trouble with the border force immigration officials. The officials were going to send her back to Nigeria, if they couldn’t locate the relative that had invited her. That was Ken Davidson decided to step in. What happens is rather tear-jerking.
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    On a sub zero freezing but bright and sunny late morning in Toronto, I gained an Adopted Mum. So there I was patiently…
    Posted by Ken Davidson on Saturday, November 28, 2015
    On a sub zero freezing but bright and sunny late morning in Toronto, I gained an Adopted Mum. So there I was patiently awaiting my turn to go through immigrations with the Toronto Border force, and within earshot, I heard a rather fraught and somewhat distressing conversation between a stern border force immigration official…and a wheel chair bound grandma…near enough same age as my mum. She obviously didn’t speak much in terms of English, but I could tell from her pidgin English that she is Delta State, possibly Urhobo. The immigration officer was asking her who she came to see and how long for…she couldn’t understand a word. The immigration officer was at this stage getting rather impatient and started raising her voice at which point the poor lady started crying. So being the only Nigerian around, I stepped up and politely told the officials that I speak the same language as the lady. Quite quickly, the lady looked at me and said my son, and started rapping Urhobo splattered with pidgin English. Although I told her I wasn’t Urhobo but I can converse in pidgin quite well. And that if we cannot make any headway, I’d call a few close friends that are Urhobo. To cut a long story short, the immigration officials were categorical that if they couldn’t locate the relative that invited her, they’d have to send her back. The poor lady broke into an Asthma crisis upon hearing “deport”. Apparently her daughter who has been in Canada for a decade invited her and before Mama left Nigeria, she (daughter) gave her all her contact details. Already in a terribly distressed state, grandma had misplaced the details. Speaking pidgin to her, I asked if she has a cellphone…otherwise called “handset”, that I can look at to get her daughter’s contact details. She promptly produced her phone…And guess what? The phone turned out to be one of the very old style Nokias. As I was scrolling through the phone and trying to locate Charity, her daughter’s number…as if we didn’t have enough stuffs to deal with, the phone died on us! I opened it up so that I could swap the sim card into one of mine…only to discover it was indeed one of the old style full size SIMS which obviously couldn’t fit into mine. By this time, I had spent an additional hour and a quarter trying to assist…One thing was paramount in my mind, to do all that was humanly possible to avoid her being sent back to the hell hole she just escaped from. Lol. Still visibly distressed, I got my phone out and called a close friend who lives in Nigeria…who is also Urhobo and speaks the dialect perfectly. Na so the woman eyes lit up when she heard a familiar dialect down the line telling her to calm down that all Is going to be well. That that man with her is going to sort it all out. Lol. Whilst all these was going on, I started going through her hand luggage meticulously and methodically…and after about 45 minutes I hit the jackpot and a presto there it was all crumpled…was Charity, her daughter’s contact details! Promptly dialled her number…and a rather apprehensive voice came through…It was Charity – mama’s daughter. She had apparently been waiting for three solid hours in the arrival hall worried sick. Without further ado, we promptly got our passports processed and made our way out…into the waiting arms of Charity, mama’s daughter….whom she hadn’t seen in 10 very long years. Tears were flowing all around…and mama insisted that I should come for her so that she could pray for me. Right there in the arrival hall, I knelt down next to her wheelchair and she prayed and prayed….without minding the hordes of Canadians walking past wondering what the heck Is going on in the middle of the arrival hall. To cap it all up, I gave mama a parting gift and told the daughter who was apparently gobsmacked, dumbfounded and extremely emotional…that I have a mum of a similar age, who also quite often travels wheelchair bound and in all these I would want to think that should my mum par adventure find herself in a similar situation in future, a similarly kind hearted human being would step in and intercede. Although it took at least 2.5 hours out of what is a hectic schedule for me, I couldn’t possibly have walked away from Grandma. And of course mamas daughter insisted on taking a selfie of me with mama before I dashed off…By a stroke of coincidence, the friend who i called to calm mama….has a sister called…yup, you guessed it, Charity…What an eventful morning!

    The post has been liked over 3,600 times and shared 555 times. These are some of the comments:

    This has definitely restored our hope in humanity!