Japan is reportedly home to a seer akin to Baba Vanga, known for her unsettlingly precise predictions, who now forewarns of a forthcoming calamity this summer.
Baba Vanga, originally Vangeliya Pandeva Gushterova, was a Bulgarian clairvoyant with an impressive track record of accurate prophecies during her lifetime. She is said to have predicted events such as the death of Princess Diana in 1997 and the 2004 Indian Ocean Tsunami before passing away in August 1996.
In Japan, Ryo Tatsuki, a former manga artist turned fortune teller, claims she has been foreseeing significant global events since the 1980s through vivid dreams.
In 1999, Tatsuki published a manga, “The Future I Saw,” chronicling various premonitions, including the 1995 Kobe earthquake and Queen frontman Freddie Mercury’s death in 1991. Although these events occurred before her book release, the work also contained other predictions that materialized.
Tatsuki accurately foresaw Mercury’s death and a subsequent film about his legacy, “Bohemian Rhapsody,” which debuted in 2018.
Moreover, she purportedly predicted the 2011 earthquake and tsunami on Japan’s east coast 15 years prior, writing about a ‘catastrophe somewhere in Eastern Japan in March 2011.’
Tatsuki also claimed to have predicted the Covid-19 pandemic, noting in her diary that an ‘unknown virus will come in 2020, will disappear after peaking in April and appear again 10 years later.’ Despite her slight misjudgment of the pandemic’s peak, her 25-year-old prediction brought her significant attention.
Currently, many are keenly observing her latest warnings of a potential natural disaster in Japan by July this year. She suggests the ocean south of Japan is ‘boiling,’ hinting at a possible undersea volcanic eruption that could trigger a ‘mega tsunami.’
The disaster’s impact could affect Japan, Taiwan, Indonesia, and the Northern Mariana Islands. Tatsuki also mentioned seeing ‘dragon-like shapes’ approaching, although experts caution that there’s ‘no scientific basis for Tatsuki’s claims,’ as per Times Now News.
Furthermore, she predicts another earthquake in Kanagawa, followed by a tsunami threatening the coast between June and September next year. Considering these predictions, relocation might be worth contemplating.