26/02/2025
Two Armenians stood over a pregnant woman whose hands were tied behind her back to a tree, flipping a coin. Their ancestors had played this bloody gamble nearly 100 years ago in Anatolia—Kars, Ağrı, Van, and Erzurum. They had heard the stories from them.
The helpless Azerbaijani woman, heavily pregnant, was trembling like an autumn leaf. Her clothes were torn, and her feet were bare. The taller Armenian removed the bayonet attached to the barrel of his Russian-made AK-47 automatic rifle, while the other tossed a coin into the air:
Boy or girl?
Girl.
Upon hearing this answer, the Armenian who had bet on "boy" swiftly slashed the pregnant woman's belly with the bayonet, pulling the baby out in one motion. His bloodshot eyes fixated on the baby's ge****ls.
You won, comrade.
I won, but how will this baby be fed?
The mother will feed it, of course.
The shorter Armenian then impaled the baby on the bayonet and pressed it against the mother's chest:
Let the child suckle!
At the same time, in another part of Khojaly, preparations were underway for a football match with a single goal. Two severed Azerbaijani women's heads were placed as goalposts, and they were searching for a ball. When a child with a shaved head was found and brought, an Armenian militant shouted with joy:
This one is both small and hairless—it'll roll well. Cut it off!
In an instant, the child's body fell one way, and the head dropped to the ground. The Armenians cheered victoriously as they kicked the severed head with their bloodied boots, trying to score into the gruesome goal.
These two events took place in Khojaly not long ago—only 27 years ago. Both accounts come from eyewitnesses who directly witnessed the Armenian militants' massacres. Tragically, on February 26, 1992, thousands of Azerbaijanis were brutally slaughtered using various horrific methods. While news agencies quickly reported the massacre to the world, the surviving people of Khojaly, who had endured an unimaginable level of brutality, were left in despair. The first images of the massacre, which caused great shock in Turkey, were broadcast by TRT. Western journalists, particularly those from The New York Times, documented everything.
On February 26, heavily armed Armenian forces, along with the 366th Russian Motorized Infantry Regiment stationed in Khankendi under the command of Colonel Zarvigarov, attacked Khojaly and carried out one of the most savage massacres in history.
That night, artillery and rocket fire from the Russian regiment's tanks rendered Khojaly’s airport unusable, completely cutting off the city from the outside world.
The Russian-backed Armenian soldiers, who then entered the defenseless city, brutally slaughtered civilians, regardless of whether they were children, elderly, women, or infants. The horrors committed by the Armenians in occupied Khojaly were beyond comprehension:
They scalped people alive.
Those captured alive were subjected to systematic torture and medical experiments.
They used saws and chainsaws to amputate people's limbs while they were still alive.
Young girls first had their hair cut off, then their scalps removed.
Fathers were forced to watch their children executed, and children were forced to watch their fathers shot.
Severed heads were piled into baskets.
But what was the reason for this hatred?
When maps hanging in Armenian schools show 12 Turkish provinces as part of Armenia,
When Mount Ağrı (Ararat), located within Turkey's borders, is depicted on the Armenian flag,
When Armenia's national anthem declares: "Our lands are occupied; die and kill to liberate them!"
Is there really a need to search for another reason?
The official death toll from the Armenian attacks on Khojaly, carried out with the support of the 366th Regiment of the former Soviet Union's Armed Forces, was announced as 613 Azerbaijani Turks. However, it is well known that the actual number of casualties was far higher.
56 pregnant women were found with their bellies slashed open.
In this heinous attack, 487 people were severely wounded, 1,275 were taken hostage, and the remaining population barely managed to escape with their lives—but their souls and memories were permanently scarred by the atrocity.
At first, listeners could not believe the testimonies of the witnesses. But when they entered Khojaly after the massacre, they quickly realized that the eyewitnesses had not exaggerated. The words of French journalist Jean-Yves Junet, who toured the massacre site in Khojaly, captured the scale of the horror:
"I have heard many war stories. I have heard of the atrocities of the N***s, but I hope no one ever witnesses the kind of brutality I saw in Khojaly."
But who gave the order for this massacre on February 26, 1992?
It was none other than Robert Kocharyan, the man who later became the President of Armenia. A leader of the Dashnaktsutyun terrorist organization, Kocharyan was promoted in proportion to the terror activities he carried out. On March 20, 1996, he became Armenia's Prime Minister. When Levon Ter-Petrosyan, who advocated for peace in Karabakh, could no longer withstand pressure from extreme nationalists and resigned, Kocharyan took over the presidency on March 30, 1998.
Armenians r***d pregnant Turkish women, stuffed their wombs with stones, and then killed them.
They r***d and murdered young Turkish girls.
LET US NEVER FORGET… LET US NEVER LET THEM FORGET.