kris 🐐

927 posts

kris 🐐 banner
kris 🐐

kris 🐐

@Kristekris

Believe is everything.

Port harcourt Katılım Nisan 2022
796 Takip Edilen69 Takipçiler
kris 🐐 retweetledi
Chi
Chi@__Poisonivyyy·
They stabbed her 36 times and slit her throat 17 times. She held her head on with one hand, pushed her organs back in with the other and crawled to the road, she survived and her name is Alison Botha❤️
Chi tweet media
English
997
7.7K
59.9K
3.1M
Vickie🦋✨
Vickie🦋✨@adejumotoria·
Most people still think you must pay a monthly subscription before using Microsoft Office. Not exactly true. I just recorded a video showing how to download and install the latest Microsoft Office package properly. If you're interested, say “interested” and I'll send the video
English
180
14
220
15.9K
kris 🐐 retweetledi
Harry Da Diegot
Harry Da Diegot@trigottista·
Location dey show Ikorodu and Oyo but Nigerian military hid the location on purpose, so that they can claim IPOB Nowhere Ikorodu and Oyo were mentioned in the long rubbish writeup. @HQNigerianArmy which wing you dey play for Bigotry FC, we Diegots are willing to take your career up.
Harry Da Diegot tweet mediaHarry Da Diegot tweet media
Nigerian Army@HQNigerianArmy

TROOPS REOPEN ROAD SHUT FOR THREE YEARS, DESTROY BOMB FACTORY IN IMO STATE Troops of Operation UDO KA have continued to sustain aggressive joint clearance operations in parts of Imo State and environs in the ongoing Operation EASTERN SANITY, aimed at dismantling criminal enclaves and restoring normalcy to affected communities. The operations, conducted in the Orsu–Eketutu Mother Valley and Orsu–Ihiteukwa general areas as part of ongoing efforts to eliminate Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) planted by criminal elements and facilitate the safe return of residents who were forced to abandon their homes due to the activities of the proscribed Indigenous People of Biafra (IPOB) and its armed affiliate, the Eastern Security Network (ESN). In one of the operations, troops operating under 34 Artillery Brigade Nigerian Army (NA) in collaboration with personnel of the Nigerian Navy, Nigerian Air Force, Department of State Services (DSS), Nigeria Police Force, and the Nigeria Security and Civil Defence Corps (NSCDC), conducted a joint clearance operation along the Lilu–Eketutu Road in the Orsu–Eketutu Mother Valley area of the state on 6 March 2026. The road, which serves as a strategic route that functions as the community’s lifeline, enabling the flow of people, goods, and services for surrounding communities, had been abandoned for over three years due to persistent threats and attacks by IPOB/ESN militants. During the operations, troops discovered IED planted at different areas along the road. The IEDs were successfully disconnected and safely recovered by Explosive Ordnance Disposal (EOD) specialists, preventing potential casualties and restoring access to the route. In a related operation, on 11 March 2026, troops conducted clearance operation in Orsu–Ihiteukwa general area, clearing suspected IED locations along key routes to enhance security and enable displaced inhabitants to return safely to their homes. During the operation, several IEDs were detonated along the route of advance. Despite the series of explosions, troops maintained operational momentum and discovered an IPOB/ESN IED-making factory within the area. The facility was thoroughly exploited, leading to the recovery of several items including Biafran flags and insignia, several rounds of 7.62 mm NATO ammunition, pipes used for priming IEDs, pistol magazines containing rounds of ammunition, double-barrel guns, CCTV cameras, as well as multiple clips and electrical wires suspected to have been used in the fabrication of explosive devices. Additionally, EOD teams discovered many other IEDs concealed within the area. The explosives were carefully disconnected, recovered, and safely destroyed. The NA reaffirms its commitment to sustaining pressure on criminal networks threatening peace and security across Imo State and the South East region. Members of the public are requested to continue providing timely and credible information to security agencies, as community cooperation is vital to dismantling criminal syndicates and restoring lasting peace. Operation UDO KA is committed to protecting law-abiding citizens, securing lives and property and completely reinforcing regional stability. OLABISI OLALEKAN AYENI Lieutenant Colonel Acting Deputy Director Army Public Relations 82 Division Nigerian Army 12 March 2026

English
529
4.3K
8.9K
656.6K
kris 🐐 retweetledi
INALEGWU
INALEGWU@tchaloyi·
Back in 2011, I went into computer hardware repairs. I started with laptop chargers. I remember peeling back the rubber, soldering wires, and always staring at that weird plastic bulge on the cable. It didn't look like it did anything, but it was on every single high-end charger I fixed. I used to wonder if it was a hidden battery or just a weight to keep the cord from tangling. It turns out, that little lump is the unsung hero of your workspace. It's called a Ferrite Bead, and its only job is to act as a silencer for your electricity. See, every electronic device is naturally noisy. They send out invisible electromagnetic signals. Without that cylinder, your charger cable would turn into a giant antenna, broadcasting interference that would make your Wi-Fi slow, your TV flicker, or your speakers buzz. Inside that plastic shell is just a chunk of magnetic iron. It catches all that electrical noise and kills it before it can escape the wire. It’s basically a muzzle for your cable so your gadgets can live in peace. INALEGWU.
Peter Agboola@baba_Omoloro

Doesn't seem like anyone knows what this is for, right?

English
622
14K
110.3K
7.5M
kris 🐐
kris 🐐@Kristekris·
Since rumors of the persian Gulf War began, I had noticed a sharp decline in electricity supply, both in PH & even Aba. My hypothesis is that gas supply for domestic power stations have been redirected to international supply ntwk, leaving us in the dark. It's very unpatriotic.
English
0
0
0
23
kris 🐐
kris 🐐@Kristekris·
I have always suspected this to be so.
Felix@felixherbt

Is Atiku working for Tinubu? And why is no sitting governor, NASS or senate member decamping to ADC? Walk with me. Everyone thinks Tinubu is Peter Obi's biggest obstacle to the presidency, but that's incorrect. Here's the truth. Atiku is the real and biggest obstacle to Peter Obi's presidential ambitions. It might not look like it on the surface, but walk with me and let me show you how. In the PDP in 2022, it was obvious that it was the turn of the South, and zoning favored Peter Obi. But it wasn't just zoning that favored Obi; the masses wanted him desperately, especially the youths. But Atiku brought in confusion, forced his way through, and made the PDP throw it open, thereby contesting and emboldening Wike to contest too. He pushed Obi out of PDP. The opposition votes were divided. Together, they both got 12 million votes. APC got just 8 million votes after all the rigging. Now, 2023 passed, and we found ourselves here. Then in 2025, the ADC coalition happened. But guess what? Atiku wants to run again. And his decision to run again has weakened the ADC. If Peter Obi was accepted as the candidate of ADC in June 2025, by now more governors would have been in ADC. The ADC would have become stronger, with everyone working toward one goal. More people would have become card-carrying ADC members by now, and strong candidates would have been contesting for governor and senate under ADC nationwide. Seriake Dickson and others would have defected to ADC instead of smaller parties. But because there are still doubts about whether Obi will get the ADC ticket or not, everything is still shaky. People aren't making bold decisions because there is too much uncertainty, uncertainty caused by @atiku So while the Atiku-induced uncertainty is rocking the ADC, Tinubu is consolidating and expanding his strongholds. Now, when the chips are down and Obi loses, we can remember that it was Atiku, not Tinubu, that pushed him down. And the serious question we should all ask is this: Is Atiku working for Tinubu?

English
0
0
0
17
Banditos🔫🔫
Banditos🔫🔫@idejiobodo·
@fearlessengr @AfricaFactsZone Hope say she 3tell una d truth about rivers state and how R was added to the names of the communities there? That's almost like one and half century of knowledge hope you documented things and knowledge from her?
English
2
0
2
3.3K
Africa Facts Zone
Africa Facts Zone@AfricaFactsZone·
A 128-year-old man in Nigeria. He has a letter from 1918 that confirms his age. He was born in 1898. He is still healthy, living without dementia and walks on his own.
English
485
4.1K
19.4K
3.9M
kris 🐐
kris 🐐@Kristekris·
@Jewtastic I think dey intend on destroying those bases that provide defense for isreal b4 finally hitting isreal. Lessons learnt from the 12 day war.
English
0
0
0
67
Ron M.
Ron M.@Jewtastic·
The IRGC has realized Israel is a very tough target - firing only a few dozen missiles, 2 or 3 at a time to send people into shelters.. Instead it is pouring 100s of drones and missiles into hitting surrounding Arab countries that do not have Israel's layered missile defense systems.
Visegrád 24@visegrad24

BREAKING: Intense Iranian drone and missile attacks against Bahrain, Kuwait and the UAE over the past hour. The video shows the scale of the new attacks in Bahrain

English
8
28
248
23.4K
Onil Coder
Onil Coder@Onil_coder·
In this modern world the most demanded skill is cyber security. I made a full guide of Cyber Security. To get it Just: Like ❤️ Repost 🔁 Bookmark 🔖 Comment "CYBER" ✉️ Follow me👤
Onil Coder tweet media
English
338
286
797
36.1K
Oku
Oku@oku_yungx·
If you don’t get a single LIKE on your comment, this is yours 🙏🏾♟️😁 @G_saiyou please observe.
Oku tweet media
English
8.8K
800
7.4K
369.2K
kris 🐐
kris 🐐@Kristekris·
@Temidayo_Simeon @motchill5 @YesItsBash Lammens is very good with his feet, both long and short. His long balls are so accurate. It makes us very dynamic in build-up. Also, i haven't seen him misplace a single short pass to a teammate. Also, he has quick reflex, like a knee-jerk reaction as degea. The top curlers...
English
1
0
0
37
kris 🐐
kris 🐐@Kristekris·
@tchaloyi If i say this is a glass dome reflection of a light souce within its enclosure, i will be called a conspiracy theorist. I have seen enough to believe so, and i no longer enjoy the arguments that follow it.
English
0
0
0
131
INALEGWU
INALEGWU@tchaloyi·
Lol. This morning, my neighbor, who's from Jos, rushed to me to show me a video his son had sent him. This was what appeared in that video. The son told him people were already praying and confessing their sins as though it was rapture that wanted to occur. I laughed. I told him, bro, tell your son to start confessing his sins to you. He will tell you everything. That was a light joke though. Lol. Now let me explain what's happening here to you like you are 5. The sun did not multiply in number. No. The sky also did not crack. Nah! What happened is a light trick. Children what did I say again? Light trick. There is ONLY one sun, but its light passed through tiny ice crystals floating high in the COLD Jos sky. Those crystals bent the light like when you shine a torch on broken glass and it scatters everywhere. Still one light. It just appears in many places. That’s why people saw extra “suns” arranged in a neat circle. No be new suns them see oh. Just light doing copy and paste (ctrl c + ctrl v). Why did this happen in Jos? It's simple. Jos is cold and high. Ice can form in the clouds there, especially in the morning. Try this in Lagos heat and all you’ll see is sweat. My Lagos people, no shades intended oh abeg. It’s rare, beautiful, and harmless. Nature just decided to show small werey. Allow 🙌🏽 Sometimes the sky is not sending a message. It’s just reminding us that unlike some politicians in a certain country, light can lie too. Just that without speaking. Class don end. INALEGWU.
TENIOLA@Teeniiola

Things dey sup oo. Man shares a strange sky phenomenon where five “suns” appeared together in Jos, Plateau State. Dear science students, can y'all please enlighten us on this?

English
29
60
500
73.1K
kris 🐐
kris 🐐@Kristekris·
@LaNRaY_SHeeRan Then coodinared pressing evolved, and the whole tiki taka and indeed the spanish leaque fell off.
English
0
0
0
190
TheGrEAtGuYLaNRaY
TheGrEAtGuYLaNRaY@LaNRaY_SHeeRan·
This is exactly how Barca dominated football with iniesta, Xavi & busquet. They won’t let u get near them before they release the ball. Jude will first turn & twist with his stiff waist first before releasing the ball. Tchoa & Valverde can’t even make a pass under pressure
Madrid Zone@theMadridZone

🚨 Toni Kroos on IG. 👀

English
31
73
683
54.2K
kris 🐐
kris 🐐@Kristekris·
@ThetiMapping I have always wondered how a country as large and powerful as Ethiopia allowed itself to be landlocked by Eritrea. They couldn't even secure a small parcel of sea access. It is very embarrassing.
English
0
0
0
77
Theti Mapping
Theti Mapping@ThetiMapping·
Another war BREWING in the Red Sea? Ethiopia, with a population exceeding 135 million, remains completely landlocked. This is a direct consequence of Eritrea's successful 29-year war for independence, which ended in 1993. This left Eritrea, a country of just 3.5 million people, in control of the Red Sea coastline, including key ports like Massawa and Assab, while Ethiopia became dependent on foreign nations for maritime trade. 95% of Ethiopia's international trade flows through the Port of Djibouti. This dependency is considered unsustainable by Ethiopia because it exposes them to the whims of a neighboring country, imposes hefty transit fees, and creates a dangerous single-point vulnerability. For these reasons, Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has pursued alternative sea access since coming to power in 2018. For these reasons Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed has been searching for solutions since 2018. This is one of the primary reasons he initiated rapprochement with Eritrea in 2018, which resulted in him receiving the Nobel Peace Prize in 2019. The 2018 Saudi-backed peace deal was meant to kickstart Ethiopia's efforts to diversify its trading ports. There were some instances of Ethiopian vessels docking in Eritrea's Massawa and Assab Ports, but these moves were largely symbolic. In the end, a formal port leasing deal was never signed between the two countries. Regardless both countries cooperated between 2020-2022 amidst the Tigray War. Both Abiy Ahmed and Isaias Afwerki (President of Eritrea) saw the Tigray People's Liberation Front as an existential threat. Abiy Ahmed is aiming to centralize authority in Addis Ababa, while Eritrea views TPLF as a headache on its southern border. In 1998 Eritrea tried seizing the disputed Badme region from Ethiopia. The Ethiopian defense of this rural region was practically directed by the TPLF. In 2000 a ceasefire was brokered, and in 2002 Eritrea-Ethiopia Boundary Commission awarded Badme to Eritrea. But Ethiopia refused to hand it over in large part due to pressure from the TPLF. So even though Eritrea and Ethiopia were fighting against the same enemy, they still retained independent, and sometimes contradictory interests. Ethiopia cared far more about reasserting federal authority in Tigray, while Eritrea was focused on eliminating TPLF leadership and occupying border regions. The war ended in 2022 with the Pretoria Agreement which was meant to disarm and reintegrate TPLF/TDF (Tigray Defense Forces). Ethiopia and the mediators wanted these negotiations to remain an internal affair rather than a multi-state war, so Eritrea wasn't involved in the deliberations. So despite fighting for two years Eritrea wasn't even formally acknowledged in the peace settlement. Eritrea failed to achieve any of its war goals. They didn't gain control of any territory on their southern border and the TDF survived the conflict. After being thrown under the bus, it became apparent that Eritrea would never grant Ahmed port access. So since then Ethiopia has been searching for alternative options. When the Sudanese Civil War started in 2023, Ethiopia was initially a supporter of the RSF, but gradually moderated its stance in order to receive port access to the Port of Sudan from al-Burhan's Transitional Sovereignty Council. The tumult of the civil war meant that these talks never truly developed. To be fair, Ethiopia has increased its usage of Kenya's Lamu Port which somewhat helped in diversification. Moreover, in 2024, the Ethiopia–Somaliland Memorandum of Understanding was signed. This granted Ethiopia a 50-year lease to over 19km of Somaliland's coastland near Berbera for commercial and naval bases. In return Ethiopia was meant to review the possibility of recognizing Somaliland as an independent state. However the implementation of this deal was stalled due to a Turkish-mediated deal between Ethiopia and Somalia in December 2024. This deal was meant to be the basis for future negotiations on port access granted by the Federal Government of Somalia. But these talks never materialized and the Ankara Declaration has been superfluous since summer of 2025. So after all its diplomatic efforts, Ethiopia has only been able to implement an agreement with Kenya, but Lamu is nearly 1300km away from Addis Ababa, which is a staggering transport distance on land. And this is the common denominator for all other proposed solutions (Sudan, Somaliland, Somalia) they're simply too far away from the main population centers in Ethiopia. At least in Djibouti's case the Port of Doraleh is connected to Addis Ababa via railway and Djibouti is pretty close to Dire Dawa. For the aforementioned reasons, an Ethiopian invasion of Eritrea is becoming a possibility. In 2025 many signs indicated an escalation on this front. Abiy Ahmed accused Eritrea of backing rebel groups in Ethiopia such as certain factions within the TDF, Fano, and the Oromo Liberation Army in order to keep the country divided so that it doesn't turn its ire on Eritrea. In October 2025, Abiy Ahmed wrote to the UN alleging that Eritrea and hardline members of the TPLF were covertly funding and smuggling arms to Fano insurgents in the Amhara region who are trying to topple his government. Regardless of the veracity of these claims, it still points to a deteriorating relationship between both countries. Tensions simmered even more in December 2025 when Eritrea withdrew from the Intergovernmental Authority on Development, an East African trade bloc, due to alleged pro-Ethiopian bias. This all comes at a time where Egypt is working on expanding Eritrea's Port Assab & Djibouti's Port Doraleh. Egypt is trying to gain leverage over Ethiopia by controlling all its potential trading points so that it's forced to compromise on the GERD (Grand Ethiopian Renaissance Dam) which restricts the flow of water from the Blue Nile downstream to Egypt. This has further increased the stakes and means that an invasion may become impractical if Egypt entrenches its presence along the coastline which Ahmed desires. A war isn't guaranteed for several reasons. Ethiopia is already dealing with active insurgencies in Oromo and Amhara, so opening a third front at the moment would be risky. Consider the fact that the Eritrean military contains over 300,000 personnel, which is insane for a country of 3.5 million people. The international community is also largely opposed to the thought of another war in the Red Sea region, which could further disrupt global trade or create another refugee crisis. African Union, IGAD, UN, USA, EU, Saudi Arabia, and Turkey would all try to immediately deescalate the situation.
Theti Mapping tweet mediaTheti Mapping tweet mediaTheti Mapping tweet mediaTheti Mapping tweet media
English
3
23
118
19.8K
Makavelli
Makavelli@ElMachiavellII·
@BachirSoHumble The Nubians from the North Dinkas of the southern Sudan, were the real inhabitans of Ancient Egypt. They were drove down south and scattered by the marauding migrants from the Arab peninsula. Their culture and land taking , and their history was rewrote.
English
2
0
4
1.4K
Judah🦁
Judah🦁@BachirSoHumble·
South Sudanese are the original Egyptians. These are the same people that ruled during the time of Pharaoh. The biblical Egyptians are very dark and very tall. Also, Sudan is home to most pyramids in the world. 1 Chronicles 11:23 And he slew an Egyptian, a man of great stature, five cubits high; and in the Egyptian's hand was a spear like a weaver's beam; and he went down to him with a staff, and plucked the spear out of the Egyptian's hand, and slew him with his own spear.
Mike Sonko@MikeSonko

The book of Enoch speaks of them

English
94
738
3.8K
260.4K
Agọziem-Art
Agọziem-Art@nneamaka_orji·
Ọdịmn'obi 🌹❤️
Agọziem-Art tweet media
Tiếng Việt
364
292
2.3K
25.7K
Phronesis
Phronesis@Phrones64595973·
@RealOlaudah What an interesting submission. There is an element of truth in this because as a middle belter, I keep wondering why the Yoruba people always take side with the Hausa-Fulani people at the detriment of their southern brothers (SE and SS).
English
5
1
19
2.1K
Olaudah Equiano®
Olaudah Equiano®@RealOlaudah·
One Nigeria Is a Yoruba Survival Project, Not a National Ideal Between Hausa, Igbo, Fulani, and Yoruba, a hard truth stands out: the Yoruba man needs Nigeria’s unity more than anyone else, even more than the Fulani. This is not sentiment. It is strategy. The Hausa/Fulani elite already controls the spine of the Nigerian state security, military command, intelligence, and federal bureaucracy. Nigeria is useful to them, but not essential. Their power structure existed before Nigeria and will survive any reconfiguration of it. Unity strengthens their grip, but disunity does not erase their dominance. The Igbo are different. Economically mobile, globally networked, and psychologically detached from the Nigerian project, the Igbo have learned to survive without the state. Nigeria has repeatedly excluded, punished, and marginalized them. As a result, unity is not their anchor; self-preservation and self-determination are. Whether Nigeria exists or not, Igbo survival mechanisms remain intact. Now consider the Yoruba. The Yoruba political class sits in the most fragile position. The Southwest is neither numerically dominant nor is the Hausa nor coercively powerful like the Fulani. Its economic pride, Lagos, is not an ethnic homeland but a national convergence point. Lagos survives because Nigeria exists. Remove Nigeria, and Lagos becomes contested space overnight. This is the Yoruba dilemma. Without Nigeria: Lagos loses its federal shield. The Southwest loses guaranteed access to national revenue. Yoruba elites lose their role as Nigeria’s ideological and diplomatic middlemen. Their leverage between North and South collapses. That is why Yoruba politics has never seriously pursued exit. From Awolowo’s federalism to today’s restructuring rhetoric, the objective has always been controlled within unity, not separation. Nigeria is the platform through which Yoruba relevance is maintained, and this explains the pattern: Loud sermons about “One Nigeria.” Aggressive opposition to Biafra agitation. Silence or accommodation when Fulani dominance expands. Mockery of Igbo geopolitical realities while ignoring northern overreach. The Yoruba man fears a Nigeria without Nigeria more than a Nigeria under Fulani control because, a broken Nigeria forces the Yoruba elite to stand alone, and standing alone exposes territorial vulnerability, internal fragmentation, and dependence on federal relevance. This is not bias. It is analysis. The Hausa man has numbers. The Fulani man has force. The Igbo man has mobility. The Yoruba man has Nigeria. Take Nigeria away, and the Yoruba establishment must renegotiate identity, power, and survival from the ground up, a negotiation they have avoided since 1960. So when unity is preached with moral urgency even when it is putting on agbada, understand what is really speaking: not patriotism, but fear of life without the Nigerian structure. Nigeria is not sustained by love. It is sustained by unequal needs. Among all major ethnic groups, no one needs Nigeria to remain one more than the Yoruba political establishment because they are afraid of themselves. Culled
English
241
272
705
46.2K