The death of the Ekwueme minstrel, Mrs. Osinachi Nwachukwu, brought to the front burner the sourge of spousal violence, which I have decided to upgrae to terrorism. People were so embittered that they would have ‘finished’ Peter Nwachukwu if they could lay hands on him, with many suggesting the appropriate types of wicked punishment for the apparently coldhearted fellow. Others blamed the beastliness/bestiality of men in general, saying ‘it is in their character’. A particular platform I belong to dedicated a whole week to the matter, sharing relevant cases, videos, comments, and sermons. Some of the videos were unbelivably BRUTAL, drawing real or meme tears form the viwers. However, in the process, it became very obvious that men were also victimes, indeed more victimised than people imagined. Unfortunately, many, even officials funded from the public purse (Gender, Domestic and Sexual violence agencies), limit themelves to violence against women. Ocassionally, they remember the children but men are NOT in the equation. In June 2020 for instance, Ekiti State pronounced immediate dismissal for any male civil servant who sexually assaulted the female counterparts. Its Head of Service, Mrs Peju Babafemi also declared that “We will sensitise our female workers and encourage our women generally to speak out against any gender-based violence. Case closed: only women were sexually and physically assaulted; the men were, and still are, the aggressors! It is also an indubitable fact that the Coro-induced triple-locks( lockup, lockdown and lock-in) accentuated domestic terrorism( see Covid19 lockdowns and domestic violence: evidence from two studies in Argentina: Perez Vincent et al, 2020, Inter American Development Bank, downloaded 24000 times in less than 2 years). The National Human Rights Commission also received 266 reports of domestic violence in the first three months of 2022 from Kano State alone.
Incidentally
in the Osinachi case, everybody condenmed Peter
unequivocally, saying that nothing could have warranted such extreme wickedness and these were based
on the stories we heard because we were not eye-witnesses. Professor Anthony Oha of Umuchukwu, was a
lone voice, asking if Osinachi was truly
an angel at home, recalling how women terroririse men with their venomous
tongues, daring them to ‘touch me
if you are man enough’. However,when men were on the receiving
end, the comments, mostly by women,
revolved around ‘who knew what he must have done’. This gives
rise to a multiple choice question scenario. Is spousal terrorism bad on
itself? Is it bad based on who is the pugilist or the pugilee? Or is it bad
based on the offense of the pugilistic victim? This is the fulcrum of my paper at the next
Global Gender-based Violence Conference!
Spousal terrorism(also known as Intimate Partner Violence), which was initially perceived to be exclussively against women, did not start today. In Things Fall Apart, Okonkwo beat the dayligt out of his wife for killing a banana tree( p27) and nearly murdered her for running her mouth( yes; running her mouth; as it was in the beginning..) about his hunting incompetence( p28). He was so annoyed that he reasoned with his brawn,forgeting that it was the week of peace. For this, Ezaini, the priest of the earth godess fined him a shee-goat, a hen, a piece of cloth and 100 cowriws(a hefty fine in those days), telling him that even if he had caught her redhanded with another man in their matrimonial bed, the beating was condemnable. The Igbo worldview on spousal terrorism is also established in the case of Mgbafo vs Uzowulu when the supreme court of Umuofia( staffed by the ancestors, one of whom walked like Okonkwo and led by the dreaded ajofia(evil forest)) declared that it is not bravery when a man fights with a woman( p66), and directed the man to go and beg his wife and inlaws with a pot of palmwine(Achebe,C(1958) TFA, Heinemann, Ibadan). In Arrow of God, the wife-beater was additionally asked to excorcise himself of his madness.
However,
about 55 years ago, there was a very bad reverse case in my town: The bodacious
woman so terrorised her husband that a masquaredehad to be commissioned
to protect him by itu-omu (tying
fresh palm leaves around the man to indicate that he belonged to a masquerede
such that anytime the woman touched him, it was as good as daring the
masquaredes and the consequances were
better imagined!). I know the woman in question and I know the family! There was also this story about a couple
intensely scuffling behind closed doors with the husband shouting‘I will
kill you today’! The neighbours pleaded with the man to take it easy so as not to commit murder but when the scuffle continued
unabbated, they broke the door only to find the man being pounded on all sides
by the hefty wife. The man was using the little strenghth he had left to
shout I will kill you today
so that neighbours would not know that he was at the receiving end. I did not
eye-mark this story but it is thus
obvious that women are not the only
victims of spousal terrorism; it is a
two-way affair.
These are all condemnable and stand condemned. However, in June 2021Muhammed Abdullahi, Chief of Staff to Gov El-Rufai revealed that 73% of women in Kaduna LGAs did not think it was wrong for their husbands to beat them(www.globaltimesng.com). In March 2018, a Ugandan parliamentarian, Onesimus Twinamasiko ( Bugangaizi East)said on Ugandan National TV that a man should ‘touch, tackle and beat his wife somehow so as to streamline her’, That was in response to President Museveni’s remarks that men who beat their wives were cowards. He later clarified that he did not mean beatings that would cause injuries or death. Furthermore, about 90% of women aged 15-49 in Afghanistan and Jordan, and above 80% in Mali and Central African Republic, believe that a husband is justified in beating the wife under certain circumstances. 60% of women in rural Egypt feel that the man can beat his wife( that is if he has the capacity to do so) when she denies him sex, argues with him or goes out without telling him. It is even as high as 65% in Nigeria. In India, 56% of the sample believe that the husband can beat the wife for bad cooking, disrespect for in laws, leaving home without informing him or having more girls ( AA Adebayo( 2014) Domestic violence against men: balancing the gender issues in Nigeria. American Journal of Sociological Research,4[1], 14-19). In the southern region of Saudi-Arabia, 52% of women believe that husbands can beat their wives in at least one out of 6 circumstances, especially if she insults or disrespects him (EA Dhaher(2020)Women’s attitude towards accepting wife beating in the southern region of Saudi Arabia. Social Science,6(1)1-10). 38-50% of young people (aged15-19) in Africa, South Asia and Middle East believe that wife beating is Ok especially in cases of burnt food, insult, denial of access to holy of holies and neglect of Children. There are more female believers than male (UNICEFF,(2021) Attitude and social norms on violence). So, it is the more you look, the less you see; different strokes for different folks
On the other hand, the incidences in which men are the
recipients equally abound and they are
increasing in geometrical
progression but people pretend that it
does not exist . In most of the cases,
the men are either consciously killed or rendered man-less by
cutting off their manhood! That was the view of one of the victims of amputated
manhood, Mr Aliyu who lamented that his wife had ended his life-even
though he was alive to tell the tale. Examples of female terrorism include Mrs
Agbor, who contracted hired assassins to
murder her husband, Godstime (Lekki, Lagos); Mrs Ajemine who killed her
husband, Mr Tyger and buried him in a shallow grave( River State);the woman who butchered his husband, a medic in Owerri and then called his people
to come and pick up the pieces;
the wife who broke her husbands head for complaining about her food; Hilda Asumani, who stabbed her man, Prince Yaw Aboagye, to death for denying her of grass-cutter pepper-soup ( Ghana); Esther Githee( Kenya, July 2021) who bathed her husband with hot water; the weird case of Dayanne Cristina( Brazil, 2021) who killed the husband and fried his third leg; Mr Christopher Muchanga ( Zimbabew)who died after his lover, Rebecca Mbuya, pulled his third leg during a fight; the incestuous lady, Amanda McClure who murdered her boyfriend, Thomas, so that she could marry her father, which she did one month later; Nkechi, (aka Omalicha), who stabbed her man, Auwal Suleiman to death (Lagos) on allegation of cheating.; an 8 month pregnant woman amputated the husband’s penis after a ‘small’ quarrel; Mrs Omolara Seriki, who damaged the scrotum of her husband in the Iragbiji area of Osun state; Halima who amputated the pennis of her husband, Aliyu Umaru with a knife(Taraba State), pregnant Omowunmi who stabbed her husband Joseph Nwankwo, to death for planning to marry a second wife (Ibadan, 2022); Sharon who stabbed her husband , Gideon Kemboi, to death on allegation of infidelity( Kenya); Muruntayo, who killed her husband, Alaba Bakare( aka Bama) with an electric iron (what a painful death), for impregnating his sidekick in Abule-Egba, Lagos. That was after the family returned from a holiday trip from Dubai;
Elizabeth Mweete (Zambia) who doused her husband Alex Muleya, with boiling cooking oil; there was this unknown lady who bit off the Husbands ( Pierre Paul) ear because of text message from his ex.There was also the case of Stella Peter who murdered the husband
for failure to finance the daughter’ s
first year birthday party. She had demanded for N30,000 but the man, a
phone charger could only afford N3000.
There was this Malawian woman who set her husband and two children ablaze in
their home after the husband caught her in their matrimonial bed with another
man( the offender playing the victim!). There were also the cases of Akinkumi Osilulu and Gbade Olaniyi who begged the Ile-Tuntum
magistrate Court, (Oyo State) to save
them from their wives. Janeth poisoned her husband, Sunday Ekpe,( Nasarawa
State) watched him die, cut off the his pennis and placed it on chest for
frolicking with her friend;
22-year-old and pregnant Veronica Boniface
who stabbed her husband to death following a purported phone
conversation with a ‘strange woman’.( Nasarawa State, May 2020), 20-year Makoduchukwu
Ndubisi who stabbed her husband to death
at Onitsah, Anambra State Blessing Edet,
who stabbed her Fiancé Edet Ebong to death and has been
sentenced to 10 years in prison, Victoria Frabutt who tied up James, her husband, and separated
his manhood from him. There was also a
mother in-law who killed her son in-law Dmitry Bogdanov, by
stabbing him 27 times, and cut off his pennis
and threw it out of the window, because of the debt he owed her
daughter( his wife); 20 year old Blessing
John, bit off the manhood of her
boyfriend Johnson; Lauratu Ahmed poured hot water on the private part of her husband Aliyu Ibrahim(
Kano, 2019),Sibangilizwe Ngamula whose wife grabbed and twisted his
genitals, bit off the forehead and a large portion of the foreskin; Hannan a Bayero law student who stabbed
Saheed Hassan, her husband of just 7 months, (Kano) and Mary Harrison who
killed her husband for beating the family cat (Dallas, 2018). We also have Joy
who bathed her husband, Akachi with hot water for refusing to open the door for
her when she returned from an unknown destination around 11pm( Iyan’Itire,
Lagos) Mrs Udeme Odibi, who killed her husband,
Otike by ripping his intestine and genitals with a knife(Sango-Tedo, Lagos) and
Lekke Terkaa stabbed by her girlfriend who watched him struggle for life for
about 9 hours. There is this young man whose wife just redesigned his face as
reported by Francisca Eboh, and a Nigerian lady who publicly beat the daylights
out of her fiancé for calling off the relationship( Russia, April,2022)
Visit- https://kontessa.net/ Call- +2348033074217;+2348051007777
Naomi Njoki
murdered her husband David Njogu by chopping off his pennis ; Harriet
Nambi,(Uganda), who murdered her husband
for refusing to have sex with her for 2 months after the birth, Dausiya Abdulmumini, who used a N40 rat
poison to finish her husband, ( katsina State), because she didn’t love him,
Ngozi Obasi, who poured hot water mixed with pepper on her husband’ s private
part in Lagos Swati Malik who used a porn video to
entice and murder her husband, Laxman; a 4th wife, Olanshile
Nasirudeen murdered her husband for
impregnating another woman in Ijebu Ode; A woman in Zaporozhye,Ukraine screwed a nut into her husbands pennis for
cheating,Gift Paul who so beat her husband that
she was remanded in prison at Abuja,Asifa Nakagolo bit off the penis of her
husband, Mr Mukaire, for staying overnight at his second wife's house, (March
2021), Mrs Toyin Olusola poured hot water on her husband Adeyinka after he collapsed in
the house, claiming that the HOT water
was to revive him ;Chinenye Ejiofor who conspired with her
boyfriend to murder her husband Jude Okeke, in Cameroon early 2018,another lady who killed the
husband by rubbing poisonous substances
on the ‘sweet’ parts of her body which
her husband tasted and died and Agustina, who murdered her husband, Raymond
Ihugba, with acid in Akwakuma, Imo State
for failing to meet her financial demands.
We all remember the case of Maryam Sanda who murdered Bilyamin Bello
because of a text message in his phone,
These are heart-rending
stories, with differing levels of wickedness from different types of couples in
different climes and for diverse reasons.
It is obvious that men also cry and this becomes more
worrisome when we adopt a holistic or multidimensional concept of spousal terrorism. Unfortunately, our society looks the other
way while lampooning the men for brutalizing ‘weak and harmless’ wives and
intimate partners. One thing is obvious; our society is suffering from what
Chimamanda Adichie (of the Achebe stock) describes as the danger of a
single story. According to her, if we only hear a single story, we risk
a critical misunderstanding because a single story is never complete; it tells
only a part of whole story. Such single
stories create stereotypes and the problem with stereotypes is not that they
are untrue but that are incomplete; they make one story become the only
story (Chimamanda Adichie: The Danger of a single story.
TED Talk, 2009). In this case, there are two single-stories( SS), which are
intertwined. SS1: Spousal terrorism is
only physical. SS2: wives are the only victims of spousal terrorism. This small
expose has shown that men also cry but they cry internally (because it is
unmanly to cry!); they bottle up their pains and sorrows; they repress the rage
and as we all know, internal bleeding is MORE deadly than external
bleeding. Women cry but they
mostly cry externally; they even make a show of their tears and the process,
they discharge the pent-up emotion. In due course, I shall identify and discuss the other types of spousal terrorism
beyond the physical; the types of spousal terrorism that are deeper,
long-lasting and more damaging to the victims.
Meanwhile, with the alarming rate with which women go for the pennis, (cut, bite, fry, mutilate squeeze), I believe that it is time for men to insure their third-legs. This will surely be a big business for the insurance industry but any insurance firm that wants to market this product must know that I now have the patent right to this idea and product. Another easy way out is to obey the advice of this entrepreneur at Ekuku-Agbor as contained in the signboard: fear woman! I have deliberately removed the phone number so that whoever wants to get in touch with him for practical strategies and tactics, will have to go through me!
We may also explore the applicability of the federal Government anti-terrorism law on this matter. I may also seek for a special TETFUND grant to conduct an empirical survey on why the women see the pennis or the penile region, as the most attractive part to attack!( Brutal attack on male penis: the causes, methods, consequences and remedial strategies)
-
Like| Comment| Share
“Find a great mentor, someone who has already been through the many challenges of being an entrepreneur..” -Jodi Levine
Entrepreneurship in Practice: Cases, Challenges and Lessons By IK, MUO PHD is now available on Amazon, since 14/5/21. Click here to view Available for order +2348033026625 | Delivery : Worldwide
So expository. So tragic
ReplyDelete