Did ‘new Baba Vanga’ predict Japan tsunami and record-shaking earthquake? – Bundlezy

Did ‘new Baba Vanga’ predict Japan tsunami and record-shaking earthquake?

TOPSHOT - People queue up to pay for their parking as they leave the beachside area at Inage Seaside Park after much of coastal Japan went on tsunami alert following a 8.7 magnitude quake in the sea off eastern Russia, along Tokyo Bay in Chiba City, Chiba prefecture on July 30, 2025. A powerful 8.7 magnitude earthquake off Russia's far east has prompted tsunami alerts across parts of the Pacific including Japan, Hawaii, Russia and Ecuador, and warnings along the California coast, US authorities said. (Photo by Philip FONG / AFP) (Photo by PHILIP FONG/AFP via Getty Images)
People queue to leave the beachside area at Inage Seaside Park after much of coastal Japan went on tsunami alert (Picture: AFP)

A Japanese manga appears to have made another scarily accurate prediction after an 8.8 magnitude earthquake sparked tsunami warnings across the Pacific.

Nearly two million people have been evacuated with fears waves could reach almost 10 feet after 900 quakes rocked an island chain off Japan.

Beaches were deserted as people fled to higher ground, many taking refuge on building roofs, with waves already spotted on the northern island of Hokkaido.

But the tremors along with the sea surges were predicted by Ryo Tatsuki – Japan’s answer to Baba Vanga – who wrote down 15 dreams she had in the 1990s, many of which would come true.

For the latest updates on the tsunami warnings and earthquake follow Metro’s live blog 

She predicted a ‘great disaster’ on July 5, 2025, albeit making her prediction slightly early.

METRO GRAPHICS Tsunami Warning Map 3007
Tsunami warnings after an earthquake in the Pacific (Picture: Metro.co.uk)
A Japanese manga predicts a 'great disaster? for July 2025 - but can it really happen? NO PERMISSION - EDITORIAL DECISION - PLEASE LEGAL
Watashi ga Mita Mira, or The Future I Know in English, contains 15 of the author’s prophetic dreams (Picture: Ryo Tatsuki)
apan - A man walks on a road turned to mud by a downpour in the town of Tatsugo on Amami Island, Kagoshima Prefecture, southwestern Japan, on Sept. 26, 2011. (Kyodo)
A file picture from a previous earthquake in the town of Tatsugo on Amami Island (Pictures: Alamy)

They were published in a 1999 manga called Watashi ga Mita Mira, known as The Future I Saw in English.

It became famous for its eerily accurate predictions, which included the coronavirus outbreak and the March 2011 earthquake and tsunami which killed nearly 20,000 people in Japan.

‘It’s very scary to even fall asleep,’ one local told the regional broadcaster MBC. ‘It feels like it’s always shaking.’

Tatsuki, 70, wrote in her diary that she had dreamed of a ‘crack opening up under the seabed between Japan and the Philippines, sending ashore waves three times as tall as those from the Tōhoku earthquake’.

People take shelter on the roof of a fire station in Mukawa town, Hokkaido, northern Japan Wednesday, July 30, 2025, after a powerful earthquake in Russia's Far East prompted tsunami alert in parts of Japan. (Kyodo News via AP)
People take shelter on the roof of a fire station in Mukawa town, Hokkaido, northern Japan (Picture: AP)
Fishing vessels rapidly evacuating port (Picture: Marine Traffic)
An electric board notifies that some train services are suspended due to tsunami alert, at a station in Tokyo Wednesday, July 30, 2025, following a powerful earthquake in Russia's Far East. (Kota Endo/Kyodo News via AP)
An electric board notifies that some train services are suspended due to tsunami alert (Picture: Kota Endo/Kyodo News via AP)

The foreword from the publisher states: ‘The disaster will occur in July 2025.’

In the afterword, Tatsuki added: ‘If the day you have a dream is the day it becomes reality, then the next great disaster will be July 5, 2025.’

Yet in a new autobiography, The Testament of an Angel, Tatsuki distanced herself from the predictions.

‘I was unhappy that it was published primarily based on the publisher’s wishes,’ she said, according to The Sankei Shimbun.

‘I vaguely remember mentioning it, but it appears to have been hurriedly written during a rush of work.’

The epicentre of the earthquake was off the coast of the Tokara island chain, around 745 miles away from Tokyo, according to the country’s Meteorological Agency.

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