Key Points
- A man on X criticised the First Lady invite. He named recent church attacks and mass school abductions.
- He said over three hundred children remain held. He also mentioned Edwin Achi and captive wife.
- Users shared anger about party while people suffer. Many asked why leaders eat while danger grows.
A Nigerian man posted on X after the First Lady invite surfaced. He said the dinner came as kidnappings and attacks rose across Nigeria. His post listed school abductions, church bombings and a priest killed.

The man wrote that over three hundred children were taken from a school. The claim echoed recent reports including Kaduna ECWA pastor dies. He named Edwin Achi and said the man was killed in custody.
Why some see the invite as tone-deaf
He also said wives and children now face hunger and fear daily. His message urged leaders to stop parties while citizens suffer harm. Several users liked and reshared his post across the platform.
The thread has drawn debate about tone and government priorities. Some said dinners with senators feel out of touch right now. Others warned that public events can help calm concern if used well.
The debate follows many recent ValidUpdates reports on attacks and deaths. See past coverage such as Davido uses Pacific Holdings payouts for context. Those reports show public anger and growing calls for urgent action.
A security source told reporters they are tracking the abduction leads. Police said operations were ongoing and they would not share details yet. Families wait for news and many stay in daily fear.
Humanitarian groups called for more aid for those left behind. They warned children in camps face illness and poor food supplies. Aid workers asked local leaders to open routes for help now.
Social media posts show grief, anger, and calls for justice. Many users criticised elite parties while victims remain trapped and hungry. The X post kept gaining replies as the night passed.
The First Lady office did not immediately reply to requests for comment. A senate spokesperson said members would discuss the invite in due course. For now many Nigerians watch and judge leaders by their actions.
Rights groups urged transparency about demands and any ransom talks. They said clear answers could calm families and reduce panic. Leaders face pressure to show results before public trust erodes further.
The X post stays online and keeps drawing fierce public reaction nightly. It asks a blunt question: who protects ordinary people from violence now







