ỌMỌ ALESHINLOYE
11.6K posts

ỌMỌ ALESHINLOYE
@PrinceAdeyeyeMO
Tech and Politics Tweet are PERSONAL





@SirJarus Sir j in my own opinion, bukola didn't want to play the dangerous politics in Kwara state that's why he lost that crib, I remember Lai Mohammed mocking that he have retired him from active politics in Kwara state. If actually he wanted to play dangerous as the man from kogi hmmm


Omo viewing centre arguments are crazy oo. Some fans are arguing that Dennis Bergkamp is better than Ricardo Kaka @tobyasky @AbuAzeezAbolaji @sportsdokitor @Its_Mykehl @Biddybomber Please what are your thoughts


We’re really watching a lot of low quality players this days !! See Men them!!!



Iran blew those Aircrafts. US didn’t. There’s something they are not telling us.


You believe in 50/50 but God forbid a woman decides to keep her name, your jaw go dey grind like horse own. Everything should just be benefiting you, left and right


when Prof Abubakar Sulaiman was a Minister for 9 months, over 80 Kwarans got federal appointments at NEMA, NHIA, Tetfund, FRSC, etc, some of them are directors and senior civil servants now. verifiable data oo







🇨🇺 Cuba’s second nationwide blackout this week as U.S. blocks fuel for over 3 months Cuba’s 11 million people were plunged into a second nationwide blackout this week after the U.S. blocked nearly all oil shipments to the island since January, leaving the country without fuel for more than three months. Tanker traffic has nearly stopped under Washington’s “maximum pressure” campaign, with all major shipments intercepted, delayed, or forced to reroute. The last confirmed delivery was January 9: ~85,000 barrels from Mexico. ➤ Fuel shipments blocked or diverted: 🔹 Ocean Mariner (mid-Feb): carrying Colombian fuel oil; intercepted by the U.S. Coast Guard roughly 70 miles off Cuba, preventing delivery 🔹 Gas Exelero (Feb): spent five days attempting to secure fuel in Curaçao but failed to obtain cargo and left empty 🔹 Sea Horse (March): Hong Kong-flagged tanker carrying ~190,000–200,000 barrels of Russian-origin diesel loaded via ship-to-ship transfer in the Mediterranean; idled in the Atlantic for weeks before diverting toward Trinidad 🔹 LNG tanker: carrying ~27,000 metric tons of gas; rerouted away from Cuba to Venezuela to avoid U.S. sanctions ➤ Vessels now attempting to reach Cuba: 🔹 Anatoly Kolodkin: sanctioned Russian tanker carrying ~730,000 barrels of crude; currently ~3,000 nautical miles out in the Atlantic; expected early April; could provide only short-term relief if delivered 🔹 Escort presence: the tanker is accompanied by a Russian naval destroyer, underscoring the geopolitical stakes as Moscow tests U.S. enforcement 🔹 Russian naval oiler: traveling with the flotilla; U.S. officials say its cargo is too limited to significantly ease shortages ➤ Impact of fuel collapse: 🔹 Multiple nationwide blackouts in March, including the second this week 🔹 A 29-hour grid collapse earlier this week left millions without power 🔹 Airports ran out of jet fuel by mid-February, grounding most international flights 🔹 Trash collection has largely stopped in Havana as diesel supplies ran out





BREAKING: North Korea launched missile toward Sea of Japan, landing in the sea.









