
By Admin. Updated 10:29 p.m., Wednesday, December 13, 2023, Atlantic Standard Time (GMT-4).
A woman who in October 2020 predicted the La Soufrière volcanic eruption says that St. Vincent and the Grenadines should brace for a huge earthquake.
The woman who on Monday (December 11) went LIVE on Facebook on a page called Saving the Lost Ministries International said: “When I prophesied the volcano you all had a lot to say”.
On October 21, 2020, some two months before the La Soufrière volcano began erupting effusively, the woman had shared a prophecy about its pending eruption.
In the December 11, 2023 LIVE video, the woman who regards herself as a prophetess said: “I didn’t sleep last night because St. Vincent was on my mind. There is a huge earthquake that’s going to hit St. Vincent”.

She did not give any timeline as to when the earthquake will take place.
Many people in St. Vincent and the Grenadines consider themselves to be spiritual and may listen to prophecies.
She also said that the Caribbean islands should brace for more tremors and large quakes, adding that Jamaica will experience a 9.0 magnitude earthquake on the Ritcher Scale, if the Northern Caribbean island does not repent.
“The whole Caribbean nation is unstable. God has been really visiting the Caribbean countries with earthquakes, recently, but the thing about it is that a lot of us do not believe that God is going to touch many Caribbean countries. We are going to see how the Caribbean countries are unstable at this time,” she added.

“I see weeping and wailing in the Caribbean. Get ready for what God is about to do,” she said in the LIVE Video.
She said people should start preparing for the events.
The Caribbean sits on a seismic hotbed with major continental plates either moving closer together or apart.
Earthquakes are a feature of the region, and in recent times, many earthquakes have been recorded.

The region has experienced several deadly earthquakes in the past with a notable one being the Port Royal Earthquake in Jamaica on June 07, 1692 where a portion of the land fell into the sea and 5,000 people died and 3,000 buildings destroyed, according to Jamaica Information Service (JIS) website.
According to the UWI Seismic Research Centre, the largest recorded earthquake to have occurred in the Caribbean is believed to have been the El Cibao earthquake in the Dominican Republic in 1946 with aftershocks extending into 1947-48. The earthquake was of magnitude 8.1 and generated a tsunami which caused 75 deaths and rendered 20,000 homeless.

The UWI Seismic Research Centre says in its website that the largest earthquake to have occurred in the Eastern Caribbean (St. Kitts-Nevis to Trinidad & Tobago region) since continuous instrumental monitoring began in the region was the earthquake near Antigua on 8th October, 1974. The earthquake was of magnitude 7.5.
