The Executive Secretary of the Domestic and Sexual Violence Agency, Titilola Vivour-Adeniyi, revealed this in a statement made available to our correspondent on Thursday.
She stated that the programme was in line with Governor Babajide Sanwo-Olu’s commitment to providing a holistic response to sexual and gender-based violence in the state.
She said, “The worrisome increase in cases of domestic violence has informed the necessity to address the trend.
“The support and healing group sessions for perpetrators of domestic violence will tackle the root causes of domestic violence. The programme will help identify and address the underlying factors contributing to perpetrators’ violent behaviour as results from the research show that these domestic violence cases stem from deep-seated issues such as unresolved trauma, anger management problems, substance abuse, or learned patterns of violence.”
Vivour-Adeniyi noted that without psychological intervention, there was a risk that the act might become a vicious cycle.
“Without psychological intervention, there is a risk that the perpetrators may perpetuate the cycle of violence in their relationships or pass it on to future generations.
“Hence through strategic intervention perpetrators can gain insight into these factors and develop healthier coping strategies and also break the cycle of violence that the support and healing group sessions can avail,” she added.
The agency head disclosed that the structured intervention sessions would enable perpetrators to gain insights into alternative coping mechanisms, conflict resolution skills, and healthy relationship dynamics.
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