Baba Vanga and Living Nostradamus have both made the same terrifying prediction for 2025 will mark the year that aliens make contact with Earth.
Both psychics have accurately predicted major world events between them, such as the coronavirus pandemic, the death of Princess Diana, the Microsoft global outage and 9/11.
Now, both believe that researchers will make significant breakthroughs in the discovery of alien life this year.
Bulgarian mystic Baba Vanga – who died in 1996 – predicted that the earth would make contact with extraterrestrial life during a ‘major sporting event’.
With the Women’s Euro final and the Women’s Rugby World Cup fast approaching, along with Formula 1 races every weekend, it is a puzzle when this forecasted event might happen.
Athos Salomé, 38, from Brazil, known as the Living Nostradamus, suspects that the world is close to uncovering extraterrestrial life due to the James Webb telescope.
NASA describes it as ‘the largest, most powerful and most complex telescope ever launched into space’, and it launched on Christmas Day in 2021.
Salomé previously told Femail: ‘Thanks to the James Webb telescope, humanity might finally get the answer to the existence of alien life, while governments like the US may declassify UFO files.

‘If true, these discoveries could revolutionise one’s view about the universe in which we exist – and about ourselves.’
Baba Vanga also predicted that scientists would perfect the process of growing human organs in laboratories this year.
This would mean that those on donation lists would no longer have to wait and would instead be able to get the organs they needed immediately for transplants.
According to Sky History, having this medical breakthrough would extend the lives of millions and could even push the life expectancy to over 120 years.
Before she died in 1996, the psychic also wrote that 2025 would see earthquakes ravage the world as Europe is rocked by a devastating war.
‘Russia will not only survive,’ she wrote. ‘It will dominate the world,’ she said.
The ‘Nostradamus of the Balkans’ also suggested that next year would see Putin re-elected as Russia’s leader.


Putin was re-elected earlier this year, and Russia is not due another presidential election until 2030.
She also predicted a devastating war in Europe that would decimate the continent’s population, and more catastrophic natural events, including the eruption of dormant volcanoes.
Specifically, she mentioned an earthquake along the west coast of the United States.
California has experienced strong tremors in the past, including a 7.1 magnitude quake in 2019. None died.
She also predicted that telepathy would finally become a reality, an idea that has captivated scientists and futurists alike.
Salomé also warns that 2025 will be the year that ‘humanity may lose control of technology.’
He said the coming year is one of radical innovation, but also of unprecedented challenges.
With the rise of artificial intelligence, quantum computing and medical advances, he says the world could be on the brink of revolutionary progress – or imminent disaster.
Speaking to Femail, Salomé says 2025 will be the turning point. On one hand – scientific potential can provide people with efficient tools to solve numerous problems, on the other – we will see the perspective of using technology ‘cluelessly’
He added: ‘It will also hold key question answers that are important to the coming year. Are we building a progression into the future or are we barrelling ourselves into a world of confusion?
‘It appears that the world is now at what may turn out to be the most critical cross roads ever.’
Salomé predicts that 2025 will be the year when artificial intelligence reaches unimaginable levels.
He said: ‘Advanced systems will be able to operate in multiple domains at the same time, mimicking human reasoning.

‘An AI will be able to design buildings, plan advertising campaigns and diagnose diseases in a matter of seconds. But as we transfer so much power to machines, the question arises: what happens if we lose control?’
Discussing quantum computing’s potential for chaos, Salomé said: ‘Quantum computing, previously restricted to experimental laboratories, could soon solve practical problems.
Salomé also warned that governments, banks and institutions could face an unprecedented cyber crisis.
On the prospect of AI benefitting humanity, he said: ‘Imagine a future where human brains can connect directly to artificial intelligence.
‘This technology could treat neurological diseases, but it also poses a frightening risk: mental invasion and manipulation of thoughts.
‘Are we ready to give up the last stronghold of privacy – our minds?’