A woman who was greeted like the own Baba Vanga of Japan has a dark prediction for July which arouses people to cancel their trips.
Baba Vanga is world -renowned for its often dark but precise predictions on the world, despite its death in 1996.
The deceased Bulgarian mystical predicted with precision events such as the attacks of September 11 and the death of Princess Diana.
But there is another person who has made precise predictions on our future, and it is Ryo Tatsuki.
Tatsuki is a manga artist and in 1999 released her book entitled The future I saw. In this document, she detailed visions she had had, some of which became reality.
It is believed that one of Tatuski’s most specific predictions to date was a major disaster in March 2011. This date ended up being at the same time that Japan was struck by a cataclysmic earthquake and a tsunami in the north of Tohoku.
The devastating test has cost more than 18,000 people.

The artist would have predicted the 2011 earthquake that struck Japan (Kiyoshi Ota / Getty Images)
It is believed that the artist also predicted precisely the death of Freddie Mercury and the 1995 Kobe earthquake.
A complete edition ” Edition ” on Tatsuki’s book was published in 2021, and it is here that it warned against another devastating event which will take place in July 2025. This event should take place in Japan and hit the country on July 5.
Tatsuki warned that “a crack will open under the seabed between Japan and the Philippines, sending waves on the ground three times as high as those of the Tohoku earthquake”, reports CNN.
In the best-selling book, he also details the boiling of the oceans of Japan, which some have interpreted as a sign of waiting for a volcanic submarine eruption.
The disaster is taken to have its epicenter as a diamond -shaped region that connects Japan, Indonesia, Taiwan and the northern Marian islands, explains Macao News.

People would have canceled their trips to Japan (Shoko Takayasu / Bloomberg via Getty Images)
Following Tatsuki’s prediction, people would have canceled their travels in Japan our fear of being there when the disaster strikes.
Addressing CNN, CN Yuen, managing director of WWPKG, a travel agency based in Hong Kong, explained that reservations in Japan had dropped by 50% during the Easter break – a figure that should drop even more in the next two months.
People’s concerns were still exacerbated when the Chinese embassy of Tokyo issued a warning on natural disasters in Japan last month.
In its warning, the embassy said to those who lived or planned to travel to Japan to take additional precautions against natural disasters, South China Morning Post reported.