Home | WebMail |

      Calgary | Regions | Local Traffic Report | Advertise on Action News | Contact

Posted: 2016-09-08T19:53:10Z | Updated: 2016-09-08T20:20:12Z 2 Pakistani Migrants In Greece Return Lost Wallet To Its Owner | HuffPost

2 Pakistani Migrants In Greece Return Lost Wallet To Its Owner

They were two polite young men who are struggling to survive."
|
Open Image Modal
Alkis Konstantinidis / Reuters

ATHENS A man who lost his money and credit cards on the island of Chios, Greece, got a pleasant surprise when two migrants from Pakistan returned them almost immediately.

Minutes after Michalis Galatoulas, a Chios resident, lost his wallet in the town center Thursday morning, he received a phone call. A woman told him she was calling on behalf of two men from Pakistan who found the wallet and wanted to return it, the Athens News Agency reports .

The men did not ask for anything in return but only insisted that the man check that everything inside the wallet was intact, including 200 euros in cash (about $226) and credit cards.

“They were two polite young men who are struggling to survive,” Galatoulas told a local radio station, adding that finding his wallet was of vital importance as he had payments to make.

The island of Chios, in the eastern Aegean, is one of the most popular gateways to Greece for many people forced to flee the war or biting poverty in their home countries. The island has seen 38,292 migrants and refugees arrive by sea this year alone, most of them from the Middle East, according to UNHCR, the United Nations refugee agency.

The European Union and Turkey signed an agreement in March to restrict refugee flows into Europe, as a result of which at least 3,316 refugees and migrants are currently stranded in Chios, waiting in government-run camps under their asylum claims are processed. The newcomers’ relationship with the locals has often been strained, with tensions erupting between camp residents and locals who are protesting the refugees’ presence on the island.

Our 2024 Coverage Needs You

As Americans head to the polls in 2024, the very future of our country is at stake. At HuffPost, we believe that a free press is critical to creating well-informed voters. That's why our journalism is free for everyone, even though other newsrooms retreat behind expensive paywalls.

Our journalists will continue to cover the twists and turns during this historic presidential election. With your help, we'll bring you hard-hitting investigations, well-researched analysis and timely takes you can't find elsewhere. Reporting in this current political climate is a responsibility we do not take lightly, and we thank you for your support.

to keep our news free for all.

Support HuffPost

Before You Go

Refugee Portraits
(01 of09)
Open Image Modal
"Five years ago I had to leave Iran. The only things I could take with me was what fit in the pockets of my trousers. After a few months I arrived in Switzerland. I made most of the journey on foot. Every now and then we had to cross a river on a rubber boat. I only took these three photos with me. Every one reminds me of a different time in my life before I had to flee -- times I have warm memories of. I would take more things with me if that had been an option at the time, but it wasn't." -- Taghi, 27, fled from Iran in 2011 (credit:Gabriel Hill)
(02 of09)
Open Image Modal
"When I was a child, my father would often travel to Africa for work. One time when I was three, I had asked him to bring me back a real life monkey, but he brought me a stuffed bunny he had bought for me during a transit at Zurich Airport. I took that bunny everywhere. When the war began, everything went so fast I could neither understand what was going on nor think about what I wanted to take with me when we fled. That's how I forgot my bunny when we left. My dad stayed behind, and I wrote him so many letters saying things like: 'Did you find my bunny? I miss you!' I can't describe how I felt when I saw my father again three years later, in 1995. My whole body was trembling when I saw his face at the airport in Zurich -- and saw that he was holding my bunny." -- Sejla, 33, fled from Bosnia in 1992 (credit:Gabriel Hill)
(03 of09)
Open Image Modal
"It took me almost nine months to arrive in Switzerland. I wanted to take a ship from Turkey to Greece, but we kept getting caught by the coast guard in Greece and sent back to Turkey. I tried five times -- once, the boat overturned and sank. From all the things I took with me, only this cell phone is left. My mother bought it just before I fled Afghanistan -- she spent 3,000 Afghani on it. That's half of my family's monthly income. The phone was the only way I could let my family know where I was on my journey and that I was OK. My mother was very worried, so a call from time to time helped calm her down. The phone also made me feel safer and less lonely." -- Suleyman, 18, fled from Afghanistan in 2014 (credit:Gabriel Hill)
(04 of09)
Open Image Modal
"In 1959 I fled with my father, my mother, my sister and my grandparents from Tibet to India. I was 2 at the time, although I don't know the exact day I was born. I arrived in India only with my father and my grandparents -- we had lost my sister and my mother on the way. The most important items we had on our escape were the torches illuminating the pass over the Himalaya." -- Migmar, 59, fled from Tibet in 1959 (credit:Gabriel Hill)
(05 of09)
Open Image Modal
"Five years ago I had to leave Afghanistan. I was trained as a police officer there, but shortly after I had started on the job I was forced to leave the country. I had a backpack with my belongings with me, but the human traffickers told me to throw it away. The only thing I have left is this little book from the police academy and a necklace my mother gave me. I always dreamed of becoming a police officer. This little book is the only thing I have left of that dream." -- Nazim, 26, fled from Afghanistan (credit:Gabriel Hill)
(06 of09)
Open Image Modal
"I have been living in Switzerland for two years now. My family could only afford one journey out of the country, so I'm all alone here. It's very expensive to leave, so they won't be able to follow me here. When I left home my father gave me a cell phone. This cell phone and the clothes I was wearing were the only things I could take with me. Thanks to the cell phone I was able to get in touch with my family and tell them that I had arrived safely. It also gave me the feeling that I wasn't alone. It meant everything to me." -- Shireen, 21, fled from Afghanistan in 2010 (credit:Gabriel Hill)
(07 of09)
Open Image Modal
"The escape from Eritrea was quite long and exhausting. Walking for days, being held captive in several countries and crossing one of the world's biggest deserts didn't make it an easy journey. We were lucky, though. Everyone survived. I took some personal things with me but I had to throw most of it away before crossing the desert so I could take as many bottles of water with me as possible. I kept a small book with phone numbers and a few photos from my childhood. The phone numbers were very important, because I was help captive a few times and had to pay my captors a ransom for them to let me go. I'm lucky enough to have an uncle in the United States -- he'd send me money so I could pay. That made his number the most important thing in my life." -- Yosief, 20, fled from Eritrea in 2014 (credit:Gabriel Hill)
(08 of09)
Open Image Modal
"I got on a ship in Libya that was supposed to bring us to Italy. I couldn't take anything with me except the clothes I was wearing and a little piece of paper with the phone number of my family on it. They had told me to get in touch them as soon as I would arrive in Italy. About halfway, the ship overturned and sank. My clothes were soaked and became so heavy I had to take them off. They disappeared in the sea, along with that piece of paper with my family's phone number on it. I survived, together with about 200 others. Over 250 people from that ship drowned. Months after fleeing Eritrea I found someone in Switzerland who could reach out to my family. They thought I hadn't survived the crossing. This piece of paper with their number on it used to be the most important thing I owned." -- Ahmet, 23, fled from Eritrea in 2013 (credit:Gabriel Hill)
(09 of09)
Open Image Modal
"Originally, I'm Palestinian but I fled from Lebanon. A few years ago I converted from Islam to Christianity and a priest gave me this Bible. During my journey, a boat I was on was in trouble, and our fixer ordered us to throw all our stuff overboard. Somehow I managed to hide my bible. It's my most treasured possession and gives me strength in hard times. It's been soaked with seawater and it's quite dirty, but I wouldn't want a new one. Here in Switzerland I live in an asylum with predominantly Muslims -- my family are the only ones who know I converted. That's why I can't show my face -- I'm living a double life." -- Mahmoud, 20, fled from Lebanon in 2014 (credit:Gabriel Hill)