One organisation claims to be able to control the weather and make significant changes when requested, and it has strong ties to British events.
The Cacique Cobra Coral Foundation is a South American entity that presents itself as esoteric-scientific and claims to modify climate phenomena through the spirit of the Cacique (a Taino language word for ‘indigenous leader’), as manifested in the body of medium Adelaide Scritori, the institution’s current leader.
Its story blends religious beliefs, media presence, and a series of contracts and invitations that travelled far across borders, reaching even the Royal family.
According to its official website, the foundation’s mission is to “minimise catastrophes that can occur due to the imbalances caused by man in nature”.
The entity’s journey, though, is far older than its current medium, Adelaide explains. She says that when she was born, her father and she both received messages from the Cacique’s spirit, which she claims would have been in communication with Galileo Galilei and Abraham Lincoln in the past.
The foundation’s notoriety, however, took off in the 1980s, when Adelaide and her husband, Osmar Santos, started submitting climate intervention proposals to local and international government bodies.
It wasn’t long until The Guardian published two stories about the spirit in 1987 – one detailing the foundation’s offer of help to Margaret Thatcher to soften a harsh winter, and the other narrating a proposal to Iraq’s Saddam Hussein in which they offered wind and rain in the country in exchange for a war truce. Thatcher is said to have ignored the proposal, while Hussein would have declined it politely.
It was enough to pique British interest. In 2011, during Prince William and Princess Catherine’s wedding, renowned newspaper Folha de São Paulo reported that Adelaide Scritori had been hired by a wealthy businessman to travel to London and “keep the rain away from the wedding venue”.
A few years later, in Prince Harry and Duchess Meghan’s 2018 wedding, the same happened, and Adelaide was stationed in Windsor to allegedly assist with the weather.
After her royal stint, the medium then went on to work on the Gulf of Genoa and the Cannes Film Festival.
However, the Foundation’s fans are not limited to the UK. FCCC claims to have been contacted by several governments in crisis. During a nuclear tension in Asia, Japan is said to have asked for help in bringing in rain – in order to dissipate chemical residue in the event of a possible North Korean attack, according to co-founder Osmar Santos.
A similar situation is said to have occurred in the Gulf War in 1991, as well as in China on several occasions, where the foundation claims to help clear the polluted air through targeted rainfall.
The group’s influence also serves its country – the foundation was, in fact, contracted by the Brazilian state of Santa Catarina in 1985 due to recurrent floods, and by the city of Brasilia during its water crisis of 2017. The FCCC is also a permanent fixture at every edition of the Rock in Rio festival, even without formal scientific recognition.
The couple claim not to charge for any of its interventions, as they are a non-governmental organisation.
‘ The preceding article may include information circulated by third parties ’
‘ Some details of this article were extracted from the following source www.express.co.uk ’












