16

May

2007

The Nigerian shame in London PDF Print E-mail
By Dele Oluwole

I was having a nice time at work as some nice Nigerian indigenous tunes blast from my headphones. An uncle some time a go advised that I turned my eyes away from the monitor every 10 minutes to avoid an eye defect, I can not remember the medical name now but the symptom is blood clot in the eyes. So I turned my eyes away for another 5 seconds, looked around as usual and suddenly caught the eyes of a colleague who was directly opposite my desk. He smiled and I smiled back, he stood up, walked up to my desk, and showed to me his mobile phone that had a miscall from Nigeria +234805 …… as he smiled even before uttering a word my heart skipped  hoping to hear from him that a Nigerian wanted to or had already scammed him. My fear is only natural having read and watched so much discouraging and derogatory bulletins about Nigerians in London recently.

On Monday this week during lunch I went across my office to order a pack of sandwich, as it was being prepared my eyes caught a caption on a daily newspaper that was on the table. I then sat down to flip through only to discover that a Nigerian is being tried in London for yet another scam that was up to the tune of £800,000. His name is ‘Ade’-something and in his late 40s. Among the many cars he had was Bentley, travelled to Nigeria severally with suitcases full of pound sterling, has lots of property and investment in Lagos and Abuja. He has been swindling people of their money in the group of a Jamaican woman and a British man for over 6 years. The judge who is yet to pronounce his judgement said the Nigerian will definitely be jailed and deported afterwards. We have heard of those who were jailed and deported only to return under different identities, so deportation is not a panacea.

In 2004, A Nigerian friend just came in from Denmark and walked into one of the Halifax bank branches in London to open an account. He was being pleasantly attended to by a customer service advisor who took his details and passed him over to the head office to complete the process over the phone. According to my friend the person at the other end was also polite as he took some more details and finally asked for his nationality, proudly he said ‘Nigerian’ immediately he was told to give the receiver to the Advisor who started the account opening process. The customer service advisor now said ‘sorry sir we can not open an account for you’. My friend demanded to know why and why the person he spoke with over the phone suddenly became cold when he disclosed his Nationality.  I am not sure how reliable this is but I learnt that this bank has stopped opening bank account for Nigerians carrying the National passport.

The bad eggs among us have a way of affecting the lives of the innocents. My people will say ‘the trouble being brewed by a one ‘legged’ man will be shouldered by his two ‘legged’ brother’. I couldn’t open an account with Barclays bank in 2003 because the personal banker manhandled my passport while scrutinising it for likely defect; I got angry, collected it, and walked out of the branch. ‘Monkey no fine but him mama like am’. After all if the passport becomes roughened as he scrutinised it my immigration officer brothers for MM airport go ask for ‘entitlement’ before them allow me enter my country. ‘Bi ebiti opeku asi fi eyin fun eleyin’ if the trap refuses to catch a game it should be courageous enough to return the palm kernel bait to the owner.

Some years back we were known for football entertainment and gradually toiling the path of Brazil but today one thing synonymous to that name Nigeria is scam. Just type in ‘Scam’ and ‘Nigeria’ into Youtube search you will be amazed with what will come up.

The British postal authority, Royal Mail stopped employing Nigerians because of the BBC documentary in 2006. I watched the documentary in disbelieve as a Nigerian who was working for Royal mail and who is  also from the eastern part of  Nigeria opened his cavity wide and narrated to a hidden camera how Nigerian Royal mail workers sell credit cards. ‘Ole lo le to ese ole lori apata’, it takes a thief to trace another thief’s foot prints on the mountain. How did he know that Nigerians working at Royal mail sell details’ of credit cards in transit to syndicates outside? The BBC guys did a good job though as they trailed a syndicate, a Nigerian from the western Nigeria who did not realise he was been secretly filmed boasted about how he travels to America to spend stolen credit card, he even showed the undercover  journalist who is also a Nigerian his Mercedes Benz  CLK and house. ‘Omo ino lan ron sino’ The best intermediary to a Dragon is its child.

My Jamaican mechanic once told me that Nigerians have taken over the lead of scam from Jamaicans in London. He said gone are those days when Jamaicans were dreaded because they could swindle you of your hard earned money. The premise of his argument is the BBC news on Nigerians caught by British police helicopter unit who were dismantling Mercedes Benz for shipping to Lagos.  What Nigerians are known for is fast spreading to other strata of the British society; a Zimbabwean family once refused to attend a church in the UK because the pastor is a Nigerian. I try as much as possible not to travel on the London public buses because of the way my brothers and sisters constitute nuisances either when speaking to each other or when on their mobile phones.

Back to my colleague at work o jare, this time it’s not what I was thinking.  The Nigerian number flashed him several times; he wanted to know who it was and where the call was coming from. So he searched for the country codes through Google and discovered it’s a Nigerian number, which was why he laughed and came across to me for reconfirmation.

I breathe sigh of relief, oh God ….  not again, not in my office, and not my source of Gari.



Your Comments

Please make The Square an enjoyable experience for everyone by refraining from gratuitous ad-hominem contributions, defamatory comments and off-topic posting. Such posts will be removed.

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RobotRobot is offline

 # 1 | 16.05.2007 15:02

var sbtitle1084=encodeURIComponent(The Nigeria...Read the full article.

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DaBishopDaBishop is offline

 # 2 | 16.05.2007 15:16

Oluwole:
We have heard your story and we suffer with you. What have you done to help us?
What is your suggestion going forward? Or is it another Obasanjo's fault now?
You could tell the brodas on the bus to tone down for a start in pidgin...:lol:
tell dem say oyinbo go laugh you and you no like am...:lol: :lol:

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Mikky jagaMikky jaga is offline

 # 3 | 16.05.2007 15:20

Take heart my brother. It is one finger that touches the oil and the rest become soiled. There is nothing we can do about our 419 brothers (yes, they are our brothers). The only problem is the hypocricy of the white people. Their people taught our people to scam. Now that we know it better than them, we are being labelled and discriminated against.

They have seen honest Nigerians like Achebe, Soyinka, and the rest, they did not use those to label Nigerians as good academics. Yeye Oyibos. Dem never 419 them. Na them long throat dey make them fall mugu.

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ozoodooozoodoo is offline

 # 4 | 16.05.2007 16:24

When is someone in the village going to do an expose on how Europe and America facilitate looting in Africa and other parts of the world, particularly how they have been thriving as receivers of stolen properties from Africa, Russia, Middle East, etc ? No one is going to touch the obvious fact that the West now runs criminal protection rackets. Must we hate all Westerners for the acts of their governments and their financial institutions? We have the habit of writing denigrating things about ourselves. There are American thieves. There are British thieves. There are Italian thieves. There are thieves in all societies. The laws against stealing in those societies were not promulgated because of Nigerian thieves. The onus is on us to resist the drive to smear all Nigerians with the crimes of Nigerian thieves. It serves no purpose to regurgitate the propaganda used to unfairly discriminate against Nigerians in the West.

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TEchiTEchi is offline

 # 5 | 16.05.2007 16:39

Wow! Is not this horribly amazing how a few rotten apples can spoil a lot of other good ones? This is what a lot of Nigerians living in Diaspora have to constantly put up with regardless of spotless background. I do hope there will be a light at the end this tunnel. The Italian mafia is well and breathing and a whole lot of other nations who are involved in this game of pilfering from people, so why are Nigerian scammers any different from these lots? Why are other races who are involved in dirty deals not scrutinize as they do Nigerians. Does race have anything to do with it?

These questions come to my mind whenever a whole Nigerian community is held accountable for the crimes of a few Nigerians.

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KnightofdeltaKnightofdelta is offline

 # 6 | 16.05.2007 16:46

I agree with every reply to this post with all of my heart. We should stop spewing out the propaganda that these oyinbos are using against us. Left to me oo, I believe that they are just jealous.

You want to feel thieves? Go to Italy and leave your bag in a taxi and go and take a cup of capuccino. You want to know thieves? Ask our great great grand kings who were swindled into selling their citizens to the Oyinbos with mirrors. I was even told that two slaves went for a sweet.. that was a deal. Well, they stole us, stole our identity, stole our intelligence... if anyone wants to repatriate the stolen goods, who would be better at it than the giant of Africa, Nigerians, who know how to take the bull by the horn?

As for me ooo, me and my brothers will continue to kidnap them for ransom.

The Knight of Delta.

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AuspiciousAuspicious is offline

 # 7 | 16.05.2007 18:34


I breathe sigh of relief, oh God …. not again, not in my office, and not my source of Gari...



Sorry for your troubles o'jare Brother Oluwole. (Ha, funny how your last name happens to be the name of the Headquaters of Conterfeiting in Las Gidi! No vex sha.) Yes, as I was saying, I am sorry for your troubles Brotherman. It is not easy having to live with such a horrible reality everywhere you go. The Nigerians who are into scamming make things difficult for the rest of us. And boy, do we hate them for that or what? You bet we do!

You have taken a first step in sensitizing the rest of us, how the actions of a few amongst us stain the rest of us. Don't mind people like Ula-Lisa, whose incongruous humor do nothing but try to undermine the importance of what you did with your story. Let it be known that telling your story as you did has its purpose in appealing to those who indulge in this practices to stop, or sensitizing others to stop them! And I commend your little effort.

Also, as expected, some are already crying the victim cry, saying it is all "propaganda" against Nigerians. Propaganda ko, the animal called Panda ni. As if those scammers who who were caught denied their Nigerian identities - like the busted mail clerks who work for British Mail, or the ones busted by Police Helicopter Units dismantling a Mercedes for onward shipping to Naija; or the rest of them caught every so often.

Then there are those who like to go the Atiku Route; who rather than face the reality of the stigma a few of our compatriots bring upon the rest of us, would point at others like "Yeah, sebi Whitey did the same in 1899 when he came to Africa to offer Mirrors for Slaves" or "It happens in Italy too" or "It is not only Naijas that do it" or "Na lie! Di Bobo nor be Naija" - and a host of other such ridiculous excuses.

Denial of the obvious will NEVER help us clear the nasty image that a few bad eggs amongst us portray of the rest of us. People like Mr. Dele Oluwole are like Americas Bill Cosby, who have the courage and integrity to come out and say it as it is, while pleading on the need to change our ways for our own progress. Better that than making excuses for our troubles. I see no foolish propaganda against Nigeria from anyone. The only effective propaganda here is the propaganda of the scammers.

As long as y'all keep defending them rather than condemn them, the propaganda of the scammers will continue - thanks to you who rather than hate the scammers, hate those who complain of their methods. I personally have no business with the Foreign Mugu who falls for any Ade, Nnamdi or Shehu's gimmicks. My problem is with the Ade et al, they are the ones who stain my name and my heritage. Let the Mugu deal with his Muguness.

Auspicious.

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I Love NigeriaI Love Nigeria is offline

 # 8 | 16.05.2007 18:43

The Crooks, The Gullible, And 419 Scams Or Wallowing In The Mud ?

http://www.ngex.com/personalities/voices/padujie040103.htm

http://www.amanaonline.com/Articles/art_310.htm

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DaBishopDaBishop is offline

 # 9 | 16.05.2007 19:18


=Auspicious;176356>
You have taken a first step in sensitizing the rest of us, how the actions of a few amongst us stain the rest of us. Don't mind people like Ula-Lisa, whose incongruous humor do nothing but try to undermine the importance of what you did with your story. Let it be known that telling your story as you did has its purpose in appealing to those who indulge in this practices to stop, or sensitizing others to stop them! And I commend your little effort.
Auspicious.



Auspicious:
Take ya time o... leave me alone. I has nothing to do with 419 and do please stopp tha federal character, there is no Shehu in 419...yet...dey nefer wise like dat. If dey don't have dey become Almajiri they go out and beg, not steal.

...why do I suspect that you too talk at the top of ya voice...:lol: :lol:

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AuspiciousAuspicious is offline

 # 10 | 16.05.2007 19:26

Ref. Ula-Lisa's comments:


please stopp tha federal character, there is no Shehu in 419...yet...dey nefer wise like dat.



:lol:LOL!!!:lol:

"Federal Character" indeed!!!


there is no Shehu in 419...yet....



Who sai? Babangida nko?

Siddon dia, 'e go do yu like "Film Trick" featuring Jackie Chan..:D


...dey nefer wise like dat.



Haaaa! Discrimination Alert!!!!


why do I suspect that you too talk at the top of ya voice...



But of course! Am I not a Nigerian ni? :lol:

(Actually I am only loud in print - I am a shy guy)..:D

Auspicious.
 

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