'My Mother-In-Law Said I'll Die Like a Fowl'- Man Cries To Court Seeking Divorce

Source: Maryjane Ezeh/Nigeriafilms.com

After an off and on 8-month-old marriage between one Mr. John Obah, 37 and his 21 year old wife, Gift, the couple are now free to go their separate ways.

Their union was dissolved yesterday, Friday January 23, at the Ikorodu customary court, Lagos, over the constant harassment from the husband's mother-in-law.

John Obah, a trader, reportedly approached the court asking to divorce his wife over allegations that his mother in-law always came with dangerous weapons to fight him each time they had misunderstanding.

“My wife often goes to her parents' house and stay overnight for three times in a week. Anytime I have a misunderstanding with my wife, my mother in-law usually comes to fight me with dangerous weapons. I will be physically abused and my clothes torn by both of them; my mother in-law usually curses me that I will die like a fowl. Upon the incessant threat from my mother in-law, I changed the padlock to the house but they still came to burgle it. Anytime she demands for money and I don't give it to her, her mother will come to insult me.

Although our disputes were later settled by my father in-law but I don't think I can cope with their continuous trouble making.”

Refuting the allegations leveled on her, the estranged wife, and a mother of one, said her husband battered her so much that she usually runs to her parents' house for safety.

According to her, “He doesn't even respect my parents and he has not been taking good care of me. I am no more interested in the marriage; I want to go back to school.”

Presiding over the case, the court's President, Mr. Olu Adebiyi, in his judgment, granted the
couple divorce and warned them to refrain from harassing and molesting each other.

He also ordered the petitioner to pay the sum of N5, 000 to the respondent for the monthly upkeep of their only six-month child and that the child should be in the custody of the mother. He also warned the mother in-law to steer clear of the petitioner's ways