Japan’s “Vanga Baba” warns of the 2025 event that could cause devastation, and now people cancel their summer trips

It is “manga” baba.

An artist and psychic of Japanese graphic novels has planned a major disaster that will be Japan in 2025, and people are so scared that they cancel their summer holidays.

Manga artist Ryo Tatsuki has made comparisons with the mystic Bulgarian “Vanga Baba” due to his strangely precise predictions of global events, which have included everything from the death of Freddie Mercury and Princess Diana to the Covid-19 Pandemic in 2020, reported the Daily Mail.

For his last apocalyptic prophecy, exhibited in a 2021 edition of his best -selling comic book “The future I saw”, he predicted a calamity on July 5, 2025, the Guardian reported.

“The future I saw,” Ryo Tatsuki’s manga. Asuka shinsha

The exact nature of the FIASCO is unclear.

But he reflected a prediction he made in the 1999 original manga in which he warned of a major “ great disaster ” that struck Japan in March 2011, the same date as the Japanese earthquake and tsunami that killed more than 18,000 people and caused a triple merger at the Fukushima Daiichi nuclear power plant.

As such, superstitious parties took this stock to Tatsuki’s latest premonition, who hung the PSAS social networks that warn people to avoid the land of the sun rising.

The houses are devastated by the water after a tsunami and an earthquake in the city of Nothoria, in the north -east of Japan, on March 11, 2011. Atmosphere

With the so -called doomsday date on the corner vault, many travelers who had summer journeys in Japan reserved are cold feet, and the holidays are completely shattered.

Flight reserves for Japan from key markets such as South Korea, Taiwan and Hong Kong plunged dramatically following the prophecy.

According to a Bloomberg Intelligence survey, Hong Kong’s intelligence reserves dropped 50% year -on -year, while trips between the end of June and the beginning of July had dropped up to 83%.

Pandemic workers move the bodies to a funeral truck by the funeral man Andrew T. Cleckley in Brooklyn, New York, on April 29, 2020. Ap

And summer trips were not the only ones affected by the comic book. A HK travel agency stated that Japan travel reserves during the spring break from April to May were halved compared to last year.

Since then, Japanese officials have implored people to ignore the warnings, who claim that they are completely unfounded.

“It would be a significant problem if the spread of un scientific rumors on social media had an effect on tourism,” said Yoshihiro Murai, governor of the Miyagi Prefecture, one of the worst affected during the 2011 earthquake, said in a press conference by The Daily Mail. “There is no reason to worry about because the Japanese do not flee abroad … I hope people ignore rumors and visit.”

BaBa Vanga, mystic Bulgarian, the so -called prognosis powers are legendary in the psychic circles.

However, even state officials have been worried about afternoon earthquakes, and not only due to Tatsuki’s manga, whose last edition has sold more than one million copies.

In April, a government labor force warned that an earthquake originally from the Japan Pacific coast would kill so many 298,000 people.

Fortunately, while Japan is one of the most likely countries in the world’s earthquake due to its location to the “Ring of Fire” experts in the Pacific, they said that it is impossible to precisely predict the time and location of an earthquake.

Unfortunately, the so -called Japan disaster is not the only calamity on the horizon, according to “the future I saw.” Tatsuki also predicted that Covid-19, who killed more than 7 million people and overflowing hospitals in 2020, would return in 2030 and even a “greater devastation”, reported Daily Mail.

“An unknown virus will come in 2020, it will disappear after the peak in April and will appear nine years later,” he wrote.

This occurs after a highly infectious Covid-19 strain that caused hospitalization to be scared of China has raised its head to the United States with cases in New York City.

In a recent interview with Japanese media, Tatsuki warned people to take their predictions with a grain of salt.

“It’s important not to be unnecessarily influenced … and listening to the opinions of experts,” he said.

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Image Source : nypost.com

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