Peculiarities of the Challenges Faced by Men and Boys in Africa: A Deep Look at Mental Well-Being

>By Oluwaseun Ola-Daniels<

Across Africa, men and boys face unique mental health challenges that often go unspoken, misunderstood, or ignored. These challenges are not merely personal; they are structural and cultural, deeply rooted in social expectations surrounding strength, emotional control, and success. While mental health conditions affect people of all genders and ages, men and boys on the continent experience them in distinctive ways due to entrenched cultural norms, economic pressures, limited access to care, and persistent stigma.

A Widespread but Under-Recognised Crisis

According to the World Health Organization (WHO), nearly 150 million people in Africa are living with mental health conditions, including depression, anxiety, and substance use disorders. Despite this scale, access to mental health services remains severely limited, particularly outside major urban centres.

Suicide is another pressing concern. WHO data indicate that Africa’s age-standardised suicide rate stands at 11.5 per 100,000 people, with men accounting for a disproportionate share of these deaths. In many African countries, including Nigeria, men die by suicide at significantly higher rates than women. This pattern mirrors global trends but is intensified by region-specific social and economic pressures.

Cultural Expectations: “Be Strong” at All Costs

One of the most powerful influences on male mental health in Africa is the cultural expectation that men must be unshakeably strong and emotionally restrained. From an early age, boys are taught—directly and indirectly—that vulnerability equates to weakness. Phrases such as “boys don’t cry” and “man up” are commonly used to discourage emotional expression and help-seeking behaviour.

Psychologists and mental health advocates argue that this rigid cultural script pushes many boys and men to internalise stress, anxiety, and emotional pain rather than express it or seek support. Over time, this silent endurance often manifests in harmful ways, including depression, substance misuse, aggression, and, in extreme cases, suicide.

Nigeria: A Case Study of Young Men and Mental Strain

Nigeria presents a stark illustration of how these pressures intersect. Research has shown that 82.5 per cent of adolescent boys in a Nigerian correctional facility exhibited symptoms of psychiatric disorders, including disruptive behaviour, substance use, anxiety, and mood disorders.

Substance abuse among young Nigerians is particularly alarming. National surveys reveal that 14.4 per cent of people aged 15 to 64 report drug use—almost three times the global average. Anxiety disorders affect millions nationwide, and men are three to four times more likely than women to die by suicide.

Economic insecurity further compounds these challenges. High youth unemployment, financial instability, and the entrenched expectation that men must act as providers exacerbate feelings of hopelessness, shame, and depression among young men. These realities reveal how multiple pressures—emotional suppression, economic uncertainty, substance misuse, and interaction with the criminal justice system—converge to worsen mental health outcomes.

Societal Stigma and Limited Access to Help

Across Africa, particularly in rural areas, access to mental health services is grossly inadequate. Nigeria, for instance, has fewer than 0.1 psychiatrists per 100,000 people—a figure far below what is required for a population exceeding 200 million.

In many communities, mental health challenges are interpreted through spiritual or cultural frameworks, prompting families to seek help from traditional healers or religious leaders rather than trained mental health professionals. While such support may offer comfort, delays in professional intervention often worsen conditions. Combined with stigma, these barriers mean that many men only seek help when they are already in crisis, if they seek it at all.

Barriers Unique to Men: From Silence to Suicide

Experts consistently observe troubling patterns across the continent. Men are generally less likely to seek mental health support due to stigma and restrictive gender norms. In several African countries, male suicide rates far exceed those of women. In places such as South Africa, men are reported to die by suicide up to five times more often than women.

Young men face additional burdens from economic instability, unemployment, and social expectations of financial responsibility. Together, these factors create an environment in which men and boys suffer in silence—often with fatal consequences.

Conclusion: A Crisis That Demands Compassion

Mental health is not merely a personal concern; it is a societal responsibility. When boys and men are expected to suppress their pain, ignore emotional distress, and conform to rigid definitions of masculinity, the consequences are devastating. Lives are lost, families are broken, and communities are weakened.

Addressing this crisis requires compassion, listening, and systemic change. By challenging harmful norms, expanding access to mental health services, and creating spaces where emotional well-being is recognised as a fundamental part of human health, Africa can begin to heal a deeply rooted and dangerous silence.

Oluwaseun Ola-Daniels is Programme Manager, Mega Impact Foundation, Delta State.

IPC, CEMESO, CSO coalition task NASS on harmonisation of electoral bill, real-time results

>By SDN<

Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) have issued a clarion call to the National Assembly, urging the lawmakers to harmonise the Electoral Bill and validate real-time electronic transmission of election results ahead of the 2027 general elections.

This call was echoed at a Press Conference in Lagos where two frontline CSO leaders, Mr. Lanre Arogundade of the International Press Centre (IPC) and Dr. Akin Akingbulu of the Centre for Media and Society (CEMESO), expressed deep concern over the Senate’s rejection of electronic result transmission, the exclusion of downloadable missing and unissued voter cards, and the shortening of critical electoral deadlines.

The duo, who are part of a CSO coalition—including The Kukah Centre, ElectHer, Nigerian Women Trust Fund, TAF Africa, Yiaga Africa, Spaces 4 Change, CAPPA, and WARDC—also called for a technology-neutral approach to electronic result transmission.

According to Dr. Akingbulu, the divergence between the Senate and the House of Representatives on the amendments could have profound implications for the integrity of the 2027 general elections.

“The divergence between the Senate and the House of Representatives on these amendments has significant implications for the credibility of the 2027 elections. Electoral reform is not merely a procedural exercise; it is fundamental to ensuring transparency, predictability, and the legitimacy of democratic transitions.

“The protracted amendment process has created legal uncertainty, delaying INEC’s constitutionally mandated electoral preparations and potentially undermining its ability to conduct credible elections. Since the Senate vote, public discourse has been saturated with conflicting narratives regarding its precise position,” he said.

He emphasised that delays in concluding the electoral amendment could compromise preparations for the 2027 elections.

“The ongoing legal uncertainty appears to have deterred INEC from releasing the timetable for the 2027 elections, potentially placing the Commission in breach of the extant law. The 2022 Electoral Act remains in force until amended.

We urge INEC to issue the election timetable and schedule for the 2027 general election in accordance with the 2022 Electoral Act without further delay. This would fulfil statutory obligations, protect the Commission from legal challenge, provide political parties, candidates, and civil society with certainty for systematic preparations, and establish baseline timelines that any subsequent amendments could adjust through transitional provisions if necessary. Indefinite postponement pending legislative resolution only compounds administrative challenges and legal vulnerabilities,he said.

As the Senate prepares an emergency plenary session on Tuesday, 10 February 2026, the coalition called on it to seize the opportunity to adopt clear, unambiguous provisions. These should mandate real-time electronic transmission and collation of results, allow for downloadable missing and unissued voter cards, and retain timelines for election notice, submission of candidate lists, and publication of nominated candidates.

Adding further perspectives on the issue, Mr. Arogundade noted thus:

“Designated election officials should transmit all results in real time from polling units and collation centres to a public portal. These results should verify any other figures before final collation. The House of Representatives’ position on downloadable voter cards should also be adopted. During the 2023 elections, over 6.2 million registered voters were effectively disenfranchised because they did not collect their PVCs. Downloadable PVCs eliminate this barrier and open the door to fuller participation”, he said.

“Electoral timelines must be retained: 360 days for election notice, 180 days for submission of candidate lists, and 150 days for publication of nominations. Shortening these timelines increases risks, constrains ballot production and distribution, and heightens the likelihood of operational failure”, he added.

The coalition also recommended broadening eligibility to report electoral results to include political parties, candidates, accredited party agents, and observers, creating a multi-stakeholder accountability framework that strengthens the credibility of the process.

Finally, the CSOs called on the National Assembly to conclude the amendment process and transmit the final bill to the President within two weeks, urging citizens to hold legislators accountable. They stressed that public interest and electoral integrity must take precedence—through real-time electronic transmission, downloadable PVCs, and protection of timelines essential to credible elections.

The eyes of the nation are on the National Assembly. Every delay, every compromise, could affect the very foundation of our democracy. We cannot afford to gamble with the 2027 elections,” the coalition warned.