Tourists Backing Out Of Travel Plans After ‘New Baba Vanga’ Predicts Major Disaster In July

A woman being compared to the famous Baba Vanga from Japan has made a grim prediction about July, and it’s already causing some travelers to rethink and cancel their upcoming trips.

Baba Vanga became known across the globe for her dark yet surprisingly accurate visions of the future, even though she passed away back in 1996.

She is credited with foreseeing several major world events, including the September 11 attacks and the tragic passing of Princess Diana.

But now, there’s another figure who has been gaining attention for her eerily accurate predictions—Ryo Tatsuki.

Tatsuki is a manga artist who, in 1999, published a book titled The Future I Saw. In it, she documented visions she’d experienced over time.

Many readers believe several of these predictions have since come true.

One of her most well-known forecasts is linked to a major disaster she said would happen in March 2011.

That date turned out to be when the devastating earthquake and tsunami struck Japan’s Tohoku region, causing massive destruction.

That tragic event ended up taking the lives of more than 18,000 people and remains one of the worst disasters in the country’s history.

The artist is believed to have predicted the 2011 earthquake that struck JapanKiyoshi Ota/Getty Images
It’s also believed that Tatsuki foresaw the passing of music icon Freddie Mercury and predicted the 1995 Kobe earthquake.

A newly released “complete edition” of her book came out in 2021, and in it she shared another chilling prediction. She warns of a catastrophic event expected to strike Japan on July 5, 2025.

According to Tatsuki, “a crack will open up under the seabed between Japan and the Philippines, sending ashore waves three times as tall as those from the Tohoku earthquake”, as reported by CNN.

The book also includes a dramatic vision of Japan’s oceans “boiling,” which many believe might point to a future underwater volcanic eruption.

The expected epicenter of the disaster is drawn as a diamond-shaped zone stretching across Japan, Indonesia, Taiwan, and the Northern Mariana Islands, according to The Macao News.

Because of this frightening forecast, reports say that some tourists are now canceling their travel plans to Japan, worried they might be there when disaster strikes.

People are reportedly canceling their trips to JapanShoko Takayasu/Bloomberg via Getty Images
In an interview with CNN, CN Yuen, who heads WWPKG—a travel agency based in Hong Kong—said that travel bookings to Japan dropped by half during the Easter holiday. He added that the decline could get even worse in the coming months.

People’s worries have only grown since the Chinese embassy in Tokyo recently issued a public warning about potential natural disasters in Japan.

The embassy advised both residents and tourists planning to visit Japan to be extra careful and stay alert to natural hazards, according to reporting by the South China Morning Post

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