Key Points:
- Dominic Okafor gives farm tools to men and women in Aguata.He says the gifts will ease small farm work at home.
- Pictures trend online and stir sharp views from named users.Many say the tools feel too small for today’s needs.
- A few still praise the move as fast stop-gap help.They ask him to add loans, skills, tech hubs soon.
Rows of neat wheelbarrows filled a wide red field. Bright rakes and cutlass blades lay across the pans. Hon Dominic Okafor stood by the tools in white wear. He told the crowd he aimed to help small farms.

The lawmaker said many homes still live by the land. He added that simple tools save time for daily work. He promised more aid for trade and farm in time. People cheered as aides packed sets for each group.
Online buzz with named voices
Soon after, posts of the event spread on social apps. Users spoke in short lines with heat and laughs. @chizzyyofficial__1 wrote, “He should give it to his children.” He ended with “na see finish,” to show deep scorn.
@eze__nnunu typed, “This man’s Heaven go be view once.” He added two laugh emojis to drive the point. @kevinopute asked, “Why not empower your kids with the cutlass?” His note pulled in quick nods from other users.
The thread then drew harsh words from more people. @o.l.u.w.a.n.i dropped a Yoruba slur for strong rage. @pacmanvibez wrote, “Any protest wey dem go do, leave him for me.” @i_am_osma_kolly posted a string of laugh emojis.
What locals say they need
Many readers set out clear wants for real change today. They ask for skills class, soft loans and seed grants. They want hubs for tech, trade and small craft groups. They also call for roads, clinics, water and light.
In civics this month, fans track the Mele Kyari’s EFCC visit. That theme shapes trust in rule of law and deeds. Health talk also peaks with the doctors’ five-day strike plan. People weigh costs for care while work hours may drop.
Why farm tools still help
Farm work still feeds many homes in the south east. A rake clears beds for seeds and trims light trash. A cutlass cuts bush, stems, weeds and wild grass. A wheelbarrow moves yams, sand, sticks and feed.
Short gains still count for poor homes in lean times. A tool can shave hours off a long hot day. Yet young folks want plans that last for years. They ask for jobs that pay well and build hope.
Okafor noted the gifts as one step, not the end. He said he would share more support in due time. He urged the crowd to use each tool with care. He also asked them to keep calm in the chat.





