Entrenched
Epidemic: Wife-Beatings in Africa
By SHARON LaFRANIERE August 11, 2005
LAGOS, Nigeria - It was a typical husband-wife
argument. She wanted to visit her parents. He
wanted her to stay home.
So they settled it in what some here say is an
all-too-typical fashion, Rosalynn
Isimeto-Osibuamhe recalled of the incident in
December 2001. Her husband, Emmanuel, followed her
out the door. Then he beat her unconscious, she
says, and left her lying in the street near their
apartment.
Ms. Isimeto-Osibuamhe, then 31 and in the fifth
year of her marriage, had broken an unwritten rule
in this part of the world: she had defied her
husband. Surveys throughout sub-Saharan Africa
show that many men - and women, too - consider
such disobedience ample justification for a
beating.
Not Ms. Isimeto-Osibuamhe. A university
graduate and founder of a French school, she
packed her clothes and walked out as soon as she
got back from the hospital. So far, although her
resolve sometimes wavers and she does not want a
divorce, she has not gone back.
"He doesn't believe I have any rights of
my own," she said in an interview outside her
French classroom. "If I say no, he beats me.
I said: 'Wow. That is not what I want in life.'
"
Women suffer from violence in every society. In
few places, however, is the abuse more entrenched,
and accepted, than in sub-Saharan Africa. One in
three Nigerian women reported having been
physically abused by a male partner, according to
the latest study, conducted in 1993. The wife of
the deputy governor of a northern Nigerian
province told reporters last year that her husband
beat her incessantly, in part because she watched
television movies. One of President Olusegun
Obasanjo's appointees to a national anticorruption
commission was allegedly killed by her husband in
2000, two days after she asked the state police
commissioner to protect her.
"It is like it is a normal thing for women
to be treated by their husbands as punching
bags," Obong Rita Akpan, until last month
Nigeria's minister for women's affairs, said in an
interview here. "The Nigerian man thinks that
a woman is his inferior. Right from childhood,
right from infancy, the boy is preferred to the
girl. Even when they marry out of love, they still
think the woman is below them and they do whatever
they want."
In Zambia, nearly half of women surveyed said a
male partner had beaten them, according to a 2004
study financed by the United States - the highest
percentage of nine developing nations surveyed on
three continents.
In South Africa, researchers for the Medical
Research Council estimated last year that a male
partner kills a girlfriend or spouse every six
hours - the highest mortality rate from domestic
violence ever reported, they say. In Harare,
Zimbabwe's capital, domestic violence accounts for
more than 6 in 10 murder cases in court, a United
Nations report concluded last year.
Yet most women remain silent about the abuse,
women's rights organizations say. A World Health
Organization study has found that while more than
a third of Namibian women reported enduring
physical or sexual abuse by a male partner, often
resulting in injury, six in seven victims had
either kept it to themselves or confided only in a
friend or relative.
Help is typically not easy to find. Nigeria,
Africa's largest nation with nearly 130 million
people, has only two shelters for battered women,
both opened in the last four years. The United
States, by contrast, has about 1,200 such havens.
Moreover, many women say wifely transgression
justify beatings. About half of women interviewed
in Zambia in 2001 and 2002 said husbands had a
right to beat wives who argue with them, burn the
dinner, go out without the husband's permission,
neglect the children or refuse sex.
To Kenny Adebayo, a 30-year-old driver in
Lagos, the issue is clear-cut. "If you tell
your wife she puts too much salt in the dinner,
and every day, every day, every day there is too
much salt, one day you will get emotional and hurt
her," he said. "We men in Africa hate
disrespect."
Nigeria's penal code, in force in the
Muslim-dominated north, specifically allows
husbands to discipline their wives - just as it
allows parents and teachers to discipline children
- as long as they do not inflict grievous harm.
Assault laws could apply, but the police typically
see wife-beating as an exception. Domestic
violence bills have been proposed in six of
Nigeria's three dozen provinces but adopted in
just two.
Women's rights activists say that the
prevalence of abuse is emblematic of the low
status of women in sub-Saharan Africa. Typically
less educated, they work longer hours and
transport three times as much weight as men,
hauling firewood, water and sacks of corn on their
heads.
Ms. Isimeto-Osibuamhe does not fit that
standard profile. Articulate, with a fashionable
haircut and a sociology book in her bag, she
speaks in a confident, even assertive tone of
voice. Her diary is full of plans for various
projects she hopes to undertake. "I am an
organizer," she said in a series of
interviews. "I am a leader."
But that did not save her from a seemingly
endless string of beatings during her eight-year
marriage to her husband, Emmanuel.
By Nigerian standards, Ms. Isimeto-Osibuamhe
said, her parents were progressive. Her father
occasionally beat her mother, but he also
encouraged his daughter, the oldest of seven
children, to pursue her studies and, later, her
careers as a marketing executive, French teacher
and host of a French educational television show.
She was only about 16 when she met Emmanuel.
Like her, he went on to graduate from a
university, specializing in accounting. Slim and
handsome, he slapped her only once during their
long courtship, she said. She thought it was an
aberration.
It wasn't. Now 35, Ms. Isimeto-Osibuamhe says
that Emmanuel beat her more than 60 times after
she married him in 1997. He beat her, she says,
while she was pregnant with their son, now 6. He
threw a lantern at her. He held a knife to her
head, she said, while a friend pleaded with him
not to kill her.
Emmanuel Osibuamhe, 36, now says he was wrong
to beat his wife. But in a two-hour interview in
his office, which doubles as barber shop, he
insisted that she drove him to it by deliberately
provoking him. Pacing the floor in freshly pressed
pants, polished shoes and yellow shirt, he grew
increasingly agitated as he recalled how she
challenged his authority.
"You can't imagine yourself beating your
wife?" he said. "You can't imagine
yourself being pushed to that level? But some
people just push you over the edge, and you do
things that you are not supposed to do."
"For God's sake," he added. "You
are the head of the home as the man. You must have
a home that is submissive to you."
To him, that means accepting that he is the
head of the household and makes the final
decisions. It also means that all property be in
his name and that his wife ask his permission
before she visits her family, he said.
When Ms. Isimeto-Osibuamhe eventually sought
help, others only seemed to support her husband's
view. She went to the police. "They told me I
am not a small girl," she recalled. "If
I don't want to be married, I should get
divorced."
She told her father-in-law. He advised her that
"beating is normal."
She told her local pastor, who counseled her
that "I shouldn't make him so angry,"
telling her "whatever my husband says, I
should submit."
She found support, finally, at Project Alert on
Violence Against Women, a nonprofit organization
that runs one of Nigeria's two shelters. She lived
at the shelter for weeks. She titled her statement
detailing the violence "A Cry for Help."
Briget Osekwe, the senior program officer, said
the group's files contained 200 cases like Ms.
Isimeto-Osibuamhe's. Even some women who are
economically independent like Ms.
Isimeto-Osibuamhe, she said, are loath to divorce
their husbands for fear of social disgrace.
"In this society, a woman must do
everything she can to make her marriage
work," said Josephine Effah-Chukwuma, who set
up Project Alert in 1999. "If it fails, the
woman gets the blame."
Since she moved out, Ms. Isimeto-Osibuamhe
said, her husband has hit her a dozen times, once
knocking her to the floor of their church. She is
torn over whether it is possible for him to
change. She worries about how she will raise her
son, now living with his grandparents, should she
divorce. "Should I stay because of the baby
and then get killed?" she asked. But at
another point she asked a reporter to make sure
that in any account of her story, her last name
would be hyphenated to include his.
Her diary is filled with notes on how his views
are wrong. "Marriage to you: A slavery
relationship!" she wrote this January.
She has now found a new outlet as the creator
and host of a local television show on domestic
violence. After the first program was broadcast,
she said, she was deluged with calls from women
like herself. She hopes to pursue their cause
through a little foundation she has formed called
"Happy Family."
"An African man believes his wife is like
a piece of property, is like a car, is like a
shoe, is like something for him to trample
on," Ms. Isimeto-Osibuamhe said. "Our
men need education."
So do "our mothers, our fathers, our
sons," she added. "The whole society
needs to be overhauled."
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