Andrew Tate brags of ‘divine power’ & says three ‘mortals’ tried to intimidate him in laundry room in ‘hellhole’ jail
ANDREW Tate has bragged about his "divine powers" after claiming three "mortals" tried to intimidate him in prison.
The influencer has been held behind bars in Romania for more than two months.
Tate and his brother Tristan have been fighting to be released since they were detained as part of a probe into human trafficking and rape allegations on December 29.
In his latest bizarre tweet from prison, former kickboxer Tate claims "three mortals" tried to "intimidate" him in the laundry room.
He wrote: "Unaware of my divine powers I extended my hand and clicked my fingers.
"Then asked them a simple question. Do you know the secrets of Yoga fire?
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"They are not sure why this changed their minds, but it did."
It comes days after Tate ranted on about being held in prison.
He said: "I've been in the exact same room. Every day Every night.
"And they will not let me leave."
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Tate has repeatedly moaned about his time in jail on social media and through emails to his subscribers.
In a recent tweet revealed his prison workout routine while complaining about his "limited freedom" in jail.
The former kickboxer told on how he does 500 squats and 500 press-ups a day.
Tate also said he walks 10km around his tiny call as he has "extremely limited freedom of action".
Meanwhile in a previous email, he moaned about the "blistering cold" while being "locked in a box".
And in another, he launched a thinly veiled attack on his supporters from his jail cell, saying he needs “better people”.
The Tate brothers remain detained amid allegations of human trafficking, organised crime and rape - with their "angels" Georgiana Naghel and Luana Radu also under investigation.
They deny all allegations against them.
The brothers have had all their appeals for release denied as Romanian authorities consider them a flight risk.
They can be held for up to 180 days should further detention extensions be granted by the courts - meaning they can be detained until June 27.
Misogynist influencer Tate built up an image that appealed to teenage boys - creating an online empire that made him one of the most searched people on Google.
Masquerading as lifestyle advice, much of the content is considered highly sexist and is seen as promoting violence against women.
His influence has had a worrying spread amongst young men and boys, with one UK MP saying he is "brainwashing" children.
Tate initially gained fame after a short-lived appearance on Big Brother.
He was dumped from the reality show after alleged footage of him beating a woman emerged online.
Since then he has sparked revulsion and outrage with a wave of warped content online.
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The Sun has reached out to Tate's team for comment.