Human Interest

Husbands will be scarce in South-East. See why

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Restiveness and killings in Anambra and the South-east geopolitical zone, in general, will deny women the opportunity of having spouses.

The declaration was made in the report of the Anambra Truth, Justice and Peace Commission (ATJPC), the Executive Summary of which was made available to the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Friday in Awka.

It noted that restiveness and killings had resulted in a structural problem of demographic sustainability because women were finding it challenging to find mating partners.

The report stated that women were some of the worst hit victims as they had suffered and might continue to suffer from killings, rape, loss of husbands, loss of sons and denial of livelihoods.

It also noted that thousands of young people had been killed since 1999 when restiveness became pronounced in the region, just as many had fled the rural areas.

“The killings from the ongoing violence in Igboland generally and in Anambra in particular due to violent crimes and claims of agitation have once again disproportionately affected the stock of young males in the region.

“It has reduced the likelihood that women will be able to find suitable mating or marriageable partners while also increasing the probability that females will end up unmarried and reproductively unfulfilled.

“It will further swell the number of unmarried women in the region, particularly among those who reside in the homeland and have limited interaction outside home boundaries.

“These women could remain unmarried or wait out their productive years in search of a suitor who has likely been killed.

“They may feel intimidated about giving birth to a child outside marriage for fear of being labelled wayward and humiliating their families for birthing children into illegitimacy,’’ it declared.

The report recalled the case of Amaka Igwe, the lawyer who was killed in Onitsha alongside her husband.

It also recalled the killing of Harira Jubril near Umunze in Orumba South Local Government Area on 25 May 2022, alongside her four daughters.

It stated that the killings had resulted in destitution or dependencies among men and had led to economic impoverishment for many women, mass widowhood and enforced childlessness.

 

“Married women who have no sons can lose access to land and to subsistence in a political economy in which re-marriage can be pretty tricky for a woman with children.

“Naturally, the additional stress of this kind of life on top of the trauma of the disappearance of the husband or breadwinner can lead to diminished outcomes for physical and mental health.

“As many communities devolved subsequently into more generalised forms of atrocity and violence, hospitals and healthcare facilities had been destroyed in the restiveness.

“Healthcare workers had become afraid of showing up for work, and access to reproductive healthcare and facilities had become more rarefied in the rural areas.

“Unlike most other parts of Nigeria, which have a problem with girl-child school enrolment, Anambra leads the states of South-east Nigeria in a unique regional problem of diminishing boy-child school enrolment and retention,’’ it stated.

It noted that women typically contributed to the livelihood and education of their children. Still, with their sources of income cut off, their children were denied access to essential nutrition and social services.

The report stressed that the consequences of insecurity had negated previous progress made on Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) in Anambra as young boys abandoned education and fled their communities for fear of being killed or abducted.

The United Nations created 17 world development goals called the SDGs in 2015 with the aim of peace and prosperity for people and the planet then and into the future.

The goals have 2030 as their attainment target date.

Anambra’s 14-man ATJPC was inaugurated in June 2022 to investigate insecurity in Anambra and the South-east.

It submitted its final report to Governor Chukwuma Soludo on Wednesday.

It had Chidi Odinkalu, a human rights lawyer and former Chairman of the Nigeria Human Rights Commission, as its chairman.

By Ifeizu Joe

Ifeizu is a seasoned journalist and Managing Editor of TheRazor. He has wide knowledge of Anambra State and has reported the state objectively for over a decade.

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