My wife called police on me: Inside the hidden crisis destroying diaspora marriages

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Kwame never thought his marriage would end with flashing blue lights.

Not in a courtroom. Not before a judge. Not even after a formal separation.

It ended in his living room when his wife picked up her phone, dialled the police, and told officers she felt unsafe.

Within minutes, he was ordered to leave the house he paid for. That night, Kwame slept on the streets of London. By morning, his marriage was effectively over.

For years, a troubling question has echoed across Ghanaian communities at home and abroad: Why are many Ghanaian men living overseas no longer eager to bring their wives to join them abroad after marriage?

Closely tied to this is another uncomfortable inquiry, “Why are many Ghanaian women living in Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, and Germany no longer interested in marrying Ghanaian men and sponsoring them overseas?”

These questions point to a deeper crisis reshaping marriage among Ghanaians in the diaspora.

Marriage and family have always been the backbone of African society. Yet in a remarkably short time, the institution has undergone a dramatic transformation. Among Ghanaians living abroad and increasingly back home, marriage is now frequently linked with separation, police intervention, and divorce.

In countries such as the United Kingdom, Canada, the United States, Germany, Belgium, and others, divorce statistics continue to rise steadily among African immigrant communities. Many people quietly accept this as “normal,” but behind closed doors, families are unravelling at alarming rates.

More troubling is a growing pattern shared by many husbands during ordinary marital disputes; some wives now call the police, triggering immediate removals from the home, restraining orders, or immigration consequences, often without thorough investigation in the early stages.

Two cases from London, England, illustrate how devastating this trend has become.

CASE ONE: HE SPONSORED HIS FAMILY—BUT NOT HIMSELF

A Ghanaian man living in London without legal status worked tirelessly to regularise his family’s situation. Through savings, loans, and years of labour, he successfully secured legal residency for his wife and children.

Ironically, he remained undocumented.

When he began to suspect that his wife was having an affair with a close acquaintance, he confronted her. The argument escalated. Instead of seeking family mediation or counselling, the wife called the police.

Officers arrived and ordered the man to leave the house immediately. With no legal status, no access to shelters, and no family nearby, he slept outside that night.

“I suffered to bring my family together,” the man later lamented in a viral video. “Today, I am homeless in a country I struggled to survive in.”

CASE TWO: TWO CALLS, TWO DEPORTATIONS

In another incident, a Nigerian businessman sponsored his wife and two children to live with him in London. After discovering that his wife was allegedly involved with a male co-worker, an argument erupted.

The wife called the police.

The husband was arrested and subsequently deported to Nigeria.

Angered by what he viewed as betrayal, the man reported to authorities that his wife’s immigration documents were fraudulent.

The police investigated and deported the woman as well.

Two parents removed from the country.

Two children left behind.

One family destroyed.

All because of phone calls made in anger.

THE FEAR DRIVING MEN AWAY FROM MARRIAGE

Stories like these circulate widely on social media, WhatsApp groups, and community platforms. They have created deep fear among many African men living abroad.
Some now avoid marriage altogether.

Others marry but refuse to sponsor their spouses.
Many prefer long-distance relationships rather than risk losing everything.
Marriage, once seen as a blessing, is increasingly viewed as a legal trap.

A SHIFT FROM MEDIATION TO POLICING

Traditionally, African marriages relied on conflict resolution through family elders, clan heads, chiefs, pastors, imams, and respected community leaders. Disputes were treated as family matters requiring dialogue and healing.
Today, those structures are weakening.
Police have replaced elders.
Courts have replaced family meetings.
Lawyers have replaced counsellors.

While law enforcement is essential in cases of real abuse and danger, using the police as a first response to normal marital conflict has devastating consequences.
A police record can destroy employment.

Immigration status can be jeopardised.
Children can be traumatised.
And reconciliation becomes nearly impossible.

A CALL FOR BALANCE

This is not an argument against women seeking protection.
Any woman facing physical violence, sexual abuse, or serious threats must seek immediate help from authorities.
But not every argument is abuse.
Not every disagreement is a crime.
Couples must relearn the art of dialogue, patience, counselling, and mediation.

TIME FOR A NATIONAL CONVERSATION

Chiefs, queen mothers, clergy, legal experts, and community leaders must come together to re-examine how marriages are protected in the diaspora.
If families collapse, societies collapse.
If marriage fails, the future suffers.
As Ghanaian communities wrestle with these painful realities, one truth stands clear.
One phone call made in anger can change a life forever.

In the next edition, I will examine divorce rates in Canada, major causes of marital breakdown, and possible pathways toward restoration.

Story By: Stephen Armah Quaye | Toronto, Canada

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