Nigeria : A cameroonian on an electric pole
For close to eight hours, a Cameroonian
named Fredrick Gino recently enacted a public life-and-death drama in
Lagos when he climbed an electric pole and threatened to kill himself
after reportedly expressing frustration about his material condition.
Gino was lucky that there was no power current to facilitate his
electrocution before he was eventually rescued by the Lagos State
Emergency Management Authority (LASEMA) officials. But that should not
be the end of the story. Attempted suicide is a serious offence under
the criminal code applicable in Lagos and if the man had committed the
same offence in his country,
(Cameroon) he would have been charged to court by now.
(Cameroon) he would have been charged to court by now.
However, the Gino saga has also brought
to the fore the rising cases of suicide attempts Nigeria. On
Tuesday evening, men of the Lagos State Rapid Response Squad (RRS)
prevented a mother of four from jumping into the Lagoon with a
12-month-old baby. According to reports, a cab driver had drawn the
attention of the RRS riders on routine patrol to the woman who, on
interrogation, said she had heard a voice propelling her to go and take
the fatal plunge with her baby.
From
jumping into the lagoon to hanging self with rope or electric cable,
Nigeria is becoming a country where so many things that were in the past
considered a taboo now happen virtually every day—and these include the
extreme act of deliberately taking one’s life. Even without statistics,
reports on suicide have grimly moved from an occasional blip to a very
disturbing trend across the country today.
There are many theories as to why some
Nigerians now take (or make attempts to take) their own lives. Indeed,
the nation’s present socio-economic environment could be a predisposing
factor to depression and perhaps suicide. Therefore, given that there is
enormous emotional and financial stress as well as pervading poverty
and hopelessness everywhere, there is a need for the authorities to
begin to examine some of the underlining causes with a view to finding
remedies for them.
In Nigeria today, the plight of the
under-privileged is steadily worsening and many go to bed with less than
a survival diet. The unemployment crisis has created a lost generation
of graduates who cannot find jobs while the dwindling prices of crude
oil in the international market and the falling value of the national
currency are likely to compound the problem for most Nigerians. Yet it
is an established fact that impoverished individuals are a major risk
group for depression which, according to experts, is the most common
reason why people commit suicide.
However, there are also other reasons
why people take their own lives and devastate members of their family
and friends with shock and grief. Underlining mental disorders such as
schizophrenia as well as excessive alcoholism and drug abuse play
significant role in triggering suicidal thoughts. Schizophrenia is a
disease with a wide range of weird symptoms like hallucinations, inner
voices, disordered thinking and irrational fears and “emotions that seem
out of tune with reality”—like the Lagos woman who was hearing a voice
telling her to go and jump into the lagoon with her baby.
Today, the use of hard
drugs—particularly Indian hemp, cocaine and even methamphetamine are
commonplace across the country—drugs whose adverse effects range from
depression to suicide. Indeed, manic depression—an emotional seesaw,
oscillating between exhilarating highs and devastating lows—is often
cited as one the reasons why there are so many mad men and women out
there on most of our major cities.
However, breakthroughs in science and
medicine have brought hope that many mental patients can lead normal and
productive lives. So are suicide victims if help can reach them early
enough. Besides, depression, one of the main culprits of suicides is
treatable. This is why we call on all authorities to take out for
rehabilitation the mentally challenged who roam the streets of our major
towns and cities. Beyond that, public officials, at all levels, should
also begin to pay serious attention to the socio-economic constraints
that now trigger in many Nigerians suicidal thoughts.
source: thisdaylive
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