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Eerie prediction: Peruvian shaman foresaw Maduro’s fall days before US capture

It began as just another seasonal forecast. Then real world events gave it an unexpected spotlight. Every December, shamans across Peru share their predictions for the year ahead. The practice is old, familiar, and widely covered by local television and newspapers. These forecasts are usually broad, touching on politics, weather, conflict, and public health. Most are treated as cultural tradition rather than serious political analysis.
January 05, 2026 / 13:49 IST
Peruvian shaman foresaw Maduro’s fall days before US capture

In the final days of December 2025, a group of Peruvian shamans spoke about turbulence in South America. Their comments focused on a powerful leader losing control suddenly and a long standing political structure collapsing early in the new year. No names were mentioned. No countries were specified. At the time, the remarks passed with little attention outside spiritual circles. That changed abruptly on January 3, 2026.

On that day, the United States announced it had captured Venezuela’s President Nicolás Maduro and his wife, Cilia Flores, during a military operation in Caracas. US officials said the pair were flown to New York to face federal charges linked to alleged drug trafficking and narco terrorism, according to reporting by Reuters and the Associated Press. The announcement caught many people off guard and quickly took over news coverage around the world. What had been a relatively quiet regional situation suddenly became the lead story across television screens, news websites, and breaking alerts.

Not long after, older videos and screenshots from Peru began resurfacing online. Users shared clips of the shamans’ late December remarks, pointing out how close they came to the actual events. Some called the timing unsettling, while others treated it as an unusual crossover between ancient belief systems and modern power politics. The posts spread fast, fuelled by surprise as much as curiosity.

In Peru, reactions like this are fairly familiar. Predictions from shamans and spiritual guides are a regular feature of public life, especially around the end of the year. Local newspapers and television shows often invite them to share their outlooks, and most people see these forecasts as reflections or symbols rather than clear promises of what is going to happen.

As the buzz grew, more grounded voices joined the conversation. Analysts pointed out that warnings about powerful leaders falling are usually vague by design. Latin America has lived through decades of coups, sanctions, street protests, and sudden political exits, so such outcomes are not exactly unusual. Some psychologists also weighed in, noting how easy it is to read meaning into old statements once events have already unfolded.

Still, the story caught on. It offered something that went beyond political arguments and official statements. Sudden, dramatic events often make people look for explanations that feel larger than policy decisions alone. In this case, the old prediction provided a storyline that mixed belief, timing, and chance in a way many found compelling.

In the end, the episode revealed more about how people react to uncertainty than about prophecy itself. When history takes an unexpected turn, people naturally search for patterns and meaning, sometimes in places they would normally pass by without a second thought.

MC World Desk
first published: Jan 5, 2026 01:45 pm

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