Domestic violence against female by male genders has always been a recurring subject globally, but a new research shows that the trend is fast tilting to the opposite direction, as it reveals that there is an increase in domestic violence against men in Lagos.
A new doctoral study at the University of Ibadan has revealed that more men are becoming victims of spousal abuse in Lagos State.
According to a report by the New Agency of Nigeria, The revelation was part of the findings of a doctoral thesis carried out by Ms Uzoamaka Chukwuma of the Department of Sociology.
The researcher said that in spite of being abused, ”men won’t report their ordeal, because they fear stigmatisation from friends and family”.
“They usually do not want any third-party interference and because they are still financially dependent on their wives.
“More married men are becoming victims of spousal abuse, but suffer in silence, because the society does not believe men can be victims of spousal abuse, hence, the non-disclosure of such experience for fear of stigmatisation,” she said.
Ms Chukwuma, however, urged both the federal and state governments to establish centres to deal with male victims of spousal abuse and prosecute female perpetrators.
NAN reports that the study, under the supervision of Adeyinka Aderinto, a renowned professor of criminology and former Deputy Vice-Chancellor (Academic), UI, took its sample population from Kosofe, Lagos Mainland, Agege, Mushin and Ikorodu.
Ms Chukwuma identified some of the abuses married men suffer as mostly emotional abuse, followed by sexual, physical and economic abuses.
She explained that men older than their wives experience more abuse than men younger than their wives.
“Married men, whose wives are not in their first marriage, are two times more likely to experience spousal abuse, while men in polygamous marriage are less likely to be victims of spousal abuse,” she said.