Juliana Salzer: Photo taken in one of the fast food
                 restaurants in Enugu during her visit to Nigeria in December 2011
Juliana Salzer is an Austrian lady living very comfortably and coming from a very comfortable home. But her sad experience and humiliation in the hands of the Norwegian customs authorities at the airport has made her to ask many questions why people should be treated not based on the content of their character but on race and religion.
 
She  visited her friend J. E. in Nigeria in December 2011 and in return  invited her to Austria for a holiday and also planned to travel to Oslo in April 2012  with her as a city she said that she had travelled to many times and had  loved so much. But this time at the airport in  Oslo  she got what she  had never bargained because she had a Nigerian friend as a co-traveller  and as such was suspected for drugs and money laundering, detained in  the name of interrogation for hours and told by a Norwegian customs  officer that Nigerians were bad people and liars because of their  country.
 
According  to Juliana Salzer, when they were called at the airport for control she  thought that it would be a normal routine check that might take 5 or a  maximum of 10 minutes to end since they were as pure as snow, but alas,  they ended up spending close to 3 hours, humiliated and their egos punctured.
 
She  said that during the interrogation she and her friend had been  separated in 2 separate booths at the back of the customs office at the  airport where they had been told to eat and drink so that they could  empty their bowels. The height of their humiliation, according to her,  was when the interrogating officers wore white plastic hand gloves and  ordered them to undress completely and bend down. Not done with that  they were forced to go to the toilet and to answer the call of nature  with the customs officers right inside the toilet collecting and  crosschecking the waste papers. At a point it got to a provocation level  when one of the customs officers started asking her again “What are  your parents doing? What are you doing for a living? Are you married?  How did you get to know your friend? At a point it turned into aggression as the customs officer stood up and  pointed her finger at her face as if she had committed a crime saying  “[…] I am talking about washing money.” Juliana remained calm and said  that she had told her that she had enough money and her parents had  enough also, so, she did not do such things. The customs officer again  threatened her this time as she said to her “Now listen, wherever you go  and whatever you do we will see it. Whenever you take or put money in  your account we will see it for the rest of your life. You had a  Nigerian boyfriend before and now you are in  Oslo  with a Nigerian, you  should know that Nigerians are very bad, they are lying all the time,  all the time about everything and this is because of their country.”
 
Juliana  asked rhetorically that if she could be treated like this just simply because she had been with a  Nigerian, what would happen if she was a Nigerian, and said that Nigeria  had got a very, very bad image. She believed that the way she had been  controlled as European citizen without any criminal record had been a  shame. She also said that she did not care if people were controlled but  to treat people the way they had done to her like a common criminal  without doing anything wrong than being a friend of a Nigerian was  ridiculous. Therefore, she said that Nigerians were targets and advised  any Nigerian planning to travel out to be prepared to show a lot of  confidence and be well informed about his/her rights and she also  advised Nigerian leaders to do something on the image of their country.
Uzoma Ahamefule, a concerned patriotic citizen writes from  Vienna ,  Austria
Mail: uzomaah@yahoo.com
Blog: http://globalreportes1.blogspot.com/
Phone: +436604659620
Mail: uzomaah@yahoo.com
Blog: http://globalreportes1.blogspot.com/
Phone: +436604659620

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