A tweet seemingly predicted the date of death of Queen Elizabeth II and has now gone viral on social media. A self-proclaimed voodoo practitioner made a tweet predicting that Queen Elizabeth II would pass away on September 8. However, in his tweet about the Queen’s demise, @orunmilavd did not mention the year of her passing. Nevertheless, as the Queen breathed her last on the date as predicted by the Twitter user, his ‘foresight’ has proven to be true. As eerie as this may sound, many social media users have been left wide-mouthed.

What was the prediction regarding Queen Elizabeth II’s death?
In his tweet, dating back to August 24, 2021, microblogging site user @orunmilavd wrote, “The Queen of England is going to die on September 8th I see this date hovering above her, continue not to believe in voodoo you will see (sic).” The tweet was shared in French. It did not mention the time, year, or the reason for the Queen’s demise but only the date which has proven to be the accurate date. The old tweet has amassed more than 15,000 likes on Twitter.
La reine d'Angleterre va mourir le 8 Septembre je vois cette date planer au dessus d'elle, continuez à ne pas croire au vaudou vous verrez
— Orunmila (@orunmilavd) August 24, 2021
Netizens react to Queen’s death date prediction
After the tweet predicting the date of death of Queen Elizabeth II has gone viral, many internet users found themselves in disbelief. Some of them even had their own theories about why the prediction came to be so accurate. Many called it a ‘scam’ Reacting to the viral tweet from @orunmilavd, one social media user said, “Have a private account, post multiple predictions, delete the wrong ones and, on the right day, make public. Some have done it for football results in the past (sic).”
Meanwhile, Twitter users have varied theories about the voodoo practitioner’s tweet. “Have a private account, post multiple predictions, delete the wrong ones and, on the right day, make public. Some have done it for football results in the past,” wrote one. Another stated, “Steps to scam people — can be applied to crypto “predictions” too: create multiple private accounts (easy with your own domain name, redirect *@domain.name to your email and register Twitter via email), each account gives a different prediction, make the correct one public.”