Connect with us

Tourists Panic As ‘New Baba Vanga’ Warns Of Disaster Coming In Just 2 Months

Celebrity

Tourists Panic As ‘New Baba Vanga’ Warns Of Disaster Coming In Just 2 Months

People are cancelling their vacations in response to a pessimistic forecast for July made by a woman who has been praised as Japan’s own Baba Vanga.

Despite her death in 1996, Baba Vanga is well known throughout the world for her frequently pessimistic yet accurate forecasts about the future of the earth.

Princess Diana’s death and the 9/11 attacks were among the significant events that the late Bulgarian mystic correctly foresaw.

However, Ryo Tatsuki is another someone who has been making precise forecasts about our future.

Tatsuki is a manga artist whose book, The Future I Saw, was published in 1999. She described her visions in it, some of which have materialised.

Source: Wikipedia

A significant catastrophe in March 2011 is regarded as one of Tatuski’s most accurate forecasts to date. This date coincided with the devastating earthquake and tsunami that struck Japan’s northern Tohoku area.

More than 18,000 people lost their life in the terrible event.

The artist is also thought to have correctly foreseen the 1995 Kobe earthquake and the death of Freddie Mercury.

Tatsuki warned of another catastrophic calamity that will occur in July 2025 in the ‘full edition’ of her book, which was published in 2021. According to predictions, this incident will occur in Japan and is expected to occur on July 5.

“A crack will open up under the seabed between Japan and the Philippines, sending ashore waves three times taller than those from the Tohoku earthquake,” Tatsuki stated in a warning, according to CNN.

The best-selling book also describes the “boiling” of Japan’s waters, which some have taken as an indication of an impending undersea volcanic eruption.

According to The Macao News, the diamond-shaped area connecting Japan, Indonesia, Taiwan, and the Northern Mariana Islands is the disaster’s epicentre.

According to reports, many are cancelling their visits to Japan because they are afraid of being there when the calamity occurs, as a result of Tatsuki’s forecast.

Bookings to Japan fell by 50% over the Easter holiday, according to CN Yuen, managing director of WWPKG, a Hong Kong-based travel firm, who spoke to CNN. This number is predicted to continue to decline over the coming months.

When the Chinese embassy in Tokyo warned of natural disasters in Japan last month, people’s worries were only made worse.

According to the South China Morning Post, the embassy issued a warning to anybody residing in or intending to visit Japan to take additional safety measures against natural catastrophes.

Now Trending:

Please SHARE this story with Family and Friends and let us know what you think in comments!

Continue Reading

With over a decade of experience in digital journalism, Jason has reported on everything from global events to everyday heroes, always aiming to inform, engage, and inspire. Known for his clear writing and relentless curiosity, he believes journalism should give a voice to the unheard and hold power to account.

To Top