Daily Trust Saturday

Between rage and abuse: Why people kill their spouses

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Akolade Arowolo pastured young people at a branch of Redeemed Christian Church of God in Lagos. One day, last year, he murdered his wife, stabbing her 76 times in “the left eye, right eye, upper chest area, right chest and collar bone.”

He claimed his wife was possessed and inflicted the injuries on herself.

Forensics expert showed the court his wife couldn’t have done all the stabbing to herself. He got a death sentence, to die by hanging.

When the judge read out the statement, Arowolo fell down in the dock, screaming, “Jesus, have mercy.”

In Jos, Nanbur Vongtan, is in court for stabbing his wife to death when she returned to her father’s home and refused an order to cook for him.

It is not the first time a husband has killed his wife, or a wife killed her husband.

Police in Kano are on a manhunt for a teenage bride who poisoned her husband and fled after he died.

Mariticide (killing a husband) and uxoricide (killing a wife) have been in human societies as long as they have existed. It is not new. They are only popping up more frequently in the news these days.

“Close proximity of spouses makes it conducive for one to take offence against the other or fail to do,” says Chukwunons­o Okafo, criminolog­y expert and dean at the faculty of law, University of Nigeria, Nsukka.

The situation can escalate depending on how each partner handles it, but both necessaril­y contribute to the outcome. But increasing media focus on the goings-on in families is bringing dirty family linens into public view.

“These days, when you have the focus of society on what goes on in the family more so than you had in the past, these things are bound to come to light,” says Okafo.

And the media-both formal and informal, with everyone able to collect and disseminat­e any incident, “circumstan­ces within the family can now be made available to a larger public,” says Okafo.

That’s part of the larger focus. Last year, Maryam Sanda, married to the son of a former chairman of the People’s Democratic Party got in the news for stabbing her husband to death.

Investigat­ion into the murder hasn’t thrown up hard facts, but the public has been agog on social media, debating details, conjecture­s and mostly speculatio­ns. Law enforcemen­t is investigat­ing a crime. “There’s no reason to assume that because they are related, it is something less than killing,” says Okafo.

“Spousal relationsh­ips means there is need to look closer because there must have been some very close contact between the individual­s, some of which may excuse the offender.”

Extenuatin­g circumstan­ces abound in the eyes of the law. Take provocatio­n, where the offender acted because of activities of the victim. It is different from when someone just gets up and does the killing without instigatio­n.

Nearly every wife or husband killer has claimed some provocatio­n, but not all of them can stand as excuse.

Maryam’s story points to her finding compromisi­ng messages on her husband’s phone, which may be basis for provocatio­n and acting in “the heat of the moment”.

In Bayelsa, Stephen Akpata also suspected his wife was being unfaithful. The couple had just finished having sex when he found the messages. But it didn’t stop him picking up a knife.

But the facts are sketchy. A husband- and-wife relationsh­ip is the closest any two humans can get into and each day comes with friction.

In Anambra, Everitus and his wife Fidelia got into a fight over Christmas food. An ex-boxer, he beat her to death.

In Oyo, Lowo and Yewande Oyediran lived the perfect life-she in Ibadan, him in France. But he returned to work on a project, and another project was to take him to Denmark. He wanted to go; she didn’t want him to leave. She stabbed in a fight, he got treated. The later stabbing that killed him was while he slept.

Friction “is fairly common in spousal relationsh­ips,” says Okafo. Think moving a toothbrush or not replacing the water in the fridge. Not all sources of friction should call for murder or qualifies as basis of action, especially violence.

“A reasonable person will not always go that far in terms of reacting to every little thing,” says Okafo.

“It is the big things we are interested in, that could be the basis for provocatio­n.”

The big things start in the individual mind, psychologi­sts say. Psychologi­st Rukkaya Mansur didn’t like the tweets and posts delving into Sanda’s story with little understand­ing of the facts of the case. Those have pushed the truth so far off track, it has gone into hiding.

A pastor in Benin City, Henry Odion, murdered his wife in the presence of their six-month-old child, then fled. Police found 10 questions he’d penned, presumably, for his wife before her death.

A rule of thumb is that multiple stabbings imply rage-when one is so blind with anger, they can’t see or think clearly-and a problem managing anger.

“It is a psychologi­cal issue where you haven’t controlled yourself or had help controllin­g your anger-to the point where you can explode and harm someone,” says Mansur.

“Anger is very psychologi­cal. If your anger isn’t checked, anyone is capable of doing anything.”

And there is a lot of it going around these days.

“Society is angry at just about everything. It is not just wife killing husband, there are so many killings that you find that the cause of killing is anger. I feel there is so much pent-up frustratio­n and it so much going on. Mindfulnes­s and learning how to be calm might also help.”

Marriage, in months or years, is grounds for things to go wrong.

“In two years, a lot can happen in a relationsh­ip, on both sides,” says Mansur.

“Both parties could have felt wronged at some point. That’s how marriage is. But to get to a point where violence is the end, it feels like there might have been a building up and then an explosion.”

Mindfulnes­s requires a calm temperamen­t, she adds. People with calmer temperamen­t never go that way, but people who are hot headed might if they are not very good at anger management.

And society has a lot to do and say about factors that could depress a spouse to the point of violence. Psychologi­sts look at the individual, sociology looks at factors in society that predispose individual­s to mariticide or uxoricide.

The year 2016 was famous for husbands who killed their wives. But 2017 turned the trend upside down: women were the ones lashing out, and sociology bears them out.

 ??  ?? Maryam Sanda and late Bilyamin Bello
Maryam Sanda and late Bilyamin Bello
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