There is a surging trend of Nigerians
committing suicide with about 80 killed in the last 13 months, according
to reported incidents collated by Daily Trust.
Seventy-nine
people had committed suicide between April 8, 2017, and May 12 this
year, according to the data obtained by Daily Trust from content
analysis of Nigerian newspapers. Majority of the reasons given for
the reported suicides range from financial difficulty, marital problems,
academic challenges, among others. Lagos State leads the pack with 14
reported cases within the period under review.
Close to 800 000
people die globally due to suicide every year, which is one person every
40 seconds, the World Health Organisation (WHO) said. According to WHO
Suicide Ranking, with 15.1 suicides per 100,000 population in a year,
Nigeria is now the 30th most suicide-prone (out of 183 nations) in the
world.
Nigeria is also ranked 10th African country with higher
rates of suicide, leading countries like Togo (ranked 26th), Sierra
Leone (11th), Angola (19th), Equatorial Guinea (7th), Burkina Faso
(22nd) and Cote d’Ivoire (5th). The International Association for
Suicide Prevention (IASP) said suicide occurs throughout the lifespan
and is the second leading cause of death among 15-29-year olds globally.
Suicide
is a global phenomenon; in fact, 78 percent of suicides occurred in
low- and middle-income countries in 2015. Suicide accounted for 1.4
percent of all deaths worldwide, making it the 17th leading cause of
death in 2015.
There are indications that for each adult who died
of suicide there may have been more than 20 others who have attempted
suicide. Reasons and signs of suicide – Experts Medical experts
said some of the signs that someone may be thinking or planning to
commit suicide include change in behaviour or the presence of entirely
new behaviours, when a person is always talking or thinking about death
or killing self, when a person loses interest in things he or she used
to care about before and making comments about being worthless, helpless
or hopeless.
Others include when the person has depression,
takes risks that could lead to death, sudden switch from being very sad
to being happy, visiting or calling people to say goodbye, looking for a
way to kill themselves, such as searching online for materials or
means, acting recklessly and withdrawing from activities to mention a
few. They said people around anyone exhibiting these signs or who
have attempted suicide before should be concerned and seek help from
experts and appropriate authorities.
Dr Mustapha Gudaji, a
consultant psychiatrist with the Aminu Kano Teaching Hospital and a
senior lecturer with Bayero University Kano, said there are many factors
responsible for the rising cases of suicide. He said there are
biological causes such as people committing suicide because of
personality defects, and some diseases that make them feel incomplete
and want to take their lives, adding that other causes are the mental
illnesses like depression, drugs abuse, and adjustment disorders.
Dr
Gudaji said the high rate of drug abuse is also increasing the
prevalence of suicide in the country saying that some people engage in
drug abuse to escape from the high realities of life, and to take care
of mental illnesses like depression, known as mal-adjustive ways of
coping.
The psychiatrist said sociological causes of suicide include unemployment and socioeconomic hardships among others. Dr
Maymunah Yusuf Kadiri, a consultant neuropsychiatrist and
psychotherapist, said depression, reactions to failure and
disappointments, in response to accumulated domestic violence,
unemployment, alcohol dependence, are some reasons for committing
suicide.
“Against the general belief that suicide results from
mental illness, not all people who commit suicide are mentally ill,” Dr
Kadiri who is also the Medical Director of Pinnacle Medical Services,
Lagos, said. She said suicide prevention needs proper coordination and collaboration to ensure effective outcomes.
According
to her, suicide is not the best way of dealing with personal loss or
the way to manage any situation. “Suicide has to stop and this involves
joint campaign by everyone,” she added. “There is need to develop
resilience (the ability to cope with adverse life events and adjust to
them), a sense of personal self-worth and self-confidence, effective
coping and problem-solving skills, and adaptive help-seeking behaviour
because they are often considered to be protective factors against the
development of suicidal behaviours,” she advised.
What religious leaders say The
Founder of the Al-Mustofiyyah Society of Nigeria, Ustaz Maisuna M.
Yahya, said while it is haram (forbidden) to commit suicide, some of the
reasons for the rising cases of suicide in the last one year include
economic hardship with some who graduated having no job and those who
learnt apprenticeship have no money to buy instruments, as well as the
low-income salary, sacked or retrenchment.
“Suicide is a great
punishable sin in the sight of Allah. And whoever hopes in God, will be
repatriated by Him. So also, are divorced cases loss of hope in the
nearest future lack of strong faith in Allah as the Sole Provider
(Sustainer). “Also, are orphanages and widows’ predicaments,
frustration from indebtedness, peers’ influence, effects of drug
addiction, the harshness of parenthood, loneliness without socialising
with other responsible people,” Yahya said.
On his part, the
Chief Imam of the Al-Habibiyyah Islamic Society, Sheik Fuad Adeyemi,
said, non-reliance on Allah and over ambition among others also
contribute to the high cases of suicide in the country.
Also,
President of the Christian Association of Nigeria (CAN), Dr. Samson
Ayokunle told Daily Trust that the economic situation in the country is
largely responsible.
“From all indications, the political class
has failed us. They over-promised but under-deliver and instead of joint
hands in solving social and economic problems, they are indulging in
blame game. The jobless, the hungry, the homeless, the hopeless, the
rejected, the poor, the sick who has no one to take care of him or her
at all, do not care which party is ruling or the opposition. “All
they want is a solution to their problems. If the religion is telling
them hereafter, the government is not put in place to send them to the
early grave but helps them to justify their existence. Our government at
all levels should wake up from their unholy slumber before the
situation snowballs into revolution. A hungry man is an angry man.
“Nigeria
has what it takes to make life comfortable to all and sundry. The
political class should stop cornering our commonwealth,” Ayokunle who
spoke through his spokesman, Pastor Adebayo Oladeji said.
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