Peruvian shamans are not to be played with it seems. Just days into the new year, they have seen one of their most shocking annual predictions materialise right in front of the entire world. On Monday, a group of shamans gathered in Peru’s capital Lima, for their annual ritual to forecast the fortunes of world leaders. Now, one of their three eerie predictions has already come true.
Five days before it happened, the shamans predicted the fall of Nicolas Maduro, who was abducted in a raid ordered by US President Donald Trump on January 3, 2025. They had even foretold that Trump would be the one to oust the long-ruling Venezuelan president. “We have asked for Maduro to leave, to retire, for President Donald Trump of the United States to be able to remove him, and we have visualised that next year this will happen,” said shaman Ana María Simeón, according to the Associated Press.However, there were some dice that fell incorrectly. “We see Nicolas Maduro defeated. Nicolas Maduro will flee Venezuela. He will not be captured,” said Juan de Dios Garcia, another shaman, reported Reuters. Well, Maduro lost the chance to flee. On Saturday, the US forces extracted the dictator and his wife, Cilia Flores from his Caracas abode in the middle of the night and then transported them to New York City, where they are being held at Brooklyn’s Metropolitan Detention Center. On Monday, the former first couple of Venezuela appeared in a federal court in New York as they are facing charges related to cocaine importation and possession of machine guns and destructive devices. Another prediction made by the shamans is one that doesn’t bode well for Trump. “The United States should prepare itself because Donald Trump will fall seriously ill,” proclaimed Garcia on Monday. Another prediction made by Garcia was the end of Russia’s war in Ukraine. “I see that the conflict will end, they will raise the flag of peace,” they predicted. The shaman’s now realised prediction is a rare occurrence and improves their mixed record of annual predictions.
