Russian troops preparing to quit Chernobyl nuclear power plant

The Russian troops are about to leave the Chernobyl nuclear power plant and its satellite town of Slavutych, MirrorMAN informs referring to UNIAN, the press service of the Energoatom National Nuclear Power Generation Company.
It is reported that the Russian troops, which seized the Chernobyl nuclear power plant and other facilities in the exclusion zone, set off in two columns towards the Ukrainian border with the Republic of Belarus.
On February 24, Russia attacked Ukraine and took control of all Chernobyl facilities located in the exclusion zone.
On March 9, the Chernobyl nuclear power plant was completely de-energized.

Erdogan to hold talks with Zelensky

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan will hold talks with Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky on Thursday.
MirrorMAN informs citing the office of the Turkish President that the talks will take place at 20:00 local time.
"The president of Turkiye will hold talks on the phone at 20:00 with his Ukrainian counterpart Volodymyr Zelensky," the message says.

Ukraine's Zelensky calls Ilham Aliyev and thanks Azerbaijani president

On March 28, President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky has called the President of the Republic of Azerbaijan Ilham Aliyev, Press Service of the Azerbaijani President disseminated information in this regard, MirrorMAN reports.During the conversation, President Volodymyr Zelensky briefed the Azerbaijani President on the situation in Ukraine.The presidents stressed the importance of establishing humanitarian corridors and continuing peace talks.During the telephone conversation, President Volodymyr Zelensky thanked President Ilham Aliyev for the humanitarian assistance provided to Ukraine,including medical supplies.President Ilham Aliyev said that Azerbaijan always attaches great importance to humanitarian issues and pays special attention to them.Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky thanked President Ilham Aliyev for the humanitarian assistance provided to Ukraine, including medical supplies,this was stated by Volodymyr Zelenskyy during a phone conversation with President Ilham Aliyev,MirrorMAN reports. President Ilham Aliyev said that Azerbaijan always attaches great importance to humanitarian issues and pays special attention to them.

Azərbaycanda 16 yaşlı qız hamilə qaldı: Araşdırma başlanılıb

Will Smith hits Chris Rock on Oscars stage

Jane Campion became just the third woman in nine decades to win best director on Sunday at an Academy Awards celebration that was disrupted when nominee Will Smith slapped presenter Chris Rock onstage over a joke about the actor's wife, MirrorMAN reports quoting Reuters. Hollywood's most prestigious awards ceremony returned to all-out glitz at the Dolby Theatre after pandemic restrictions limited the event last year. The mood was mostly upbeat until Smith unexpectedly strode onto the stage after Rock made fun of the hairstyle of Smith's wife Jada Pinkett Smith. Rock referenced the 1997 movie "G.I. Jane," in which actress Demi Moore shaved her head. Smith, who is nominated for best actor for "King Richard," slapped Rock in what at first appeared to be a scripted joke. But the theater turned somber moments later when Smith, back in his seat, shouted back, "Keep my wife's name out of your fucking mouth." Smith's comment was silenced during the live U.S. broadcast on Walt Disney Co's

Russia blocks 3 Azerbaijani websites

Another Azerbaijani media outlet has been blocked in Russia, MirrorMAN reports. Russia's Federal Service for Supervision of Communications, Information Technology and Mass Media,(Roskomnadzor) has blocked oxu.az website in the country. Netflix says it won't air state TV channels in Russia A statement from Oxu.az said that the step, which was taken without warning, was a direct violation of freedom of speech, democracy, and pluralism, and that Roskomnadzor's step was biased and illegal. Earlier, Haqqin.az and Minval.az were blocked in Russia.

Best of India in Baku // Bakıda "Hindistan günləri" sərgisi

Biden tells Ukrainian officials war 'will change 21st century'

"Biden told me two things: what happened in Ukraine will change the 21st century. He clearly understands this - this is not Russia's war against Ukraine; this is the war of tyranny against the whole world," Ukrainian Foreign Minister Dmytro Kuleba said after a meeting with US President Joe Biden in Warsaw, Poland, MirrorMAN informs via RBC Ukraine. "Biden also said that the United States will stand by Ukraine in all matters for our victory, nothing will force the United States to steer away from Ukraine and weaken support. On the contrary, the support will only increase," the Ukrainian minister said.

Buğda idxalında Azərbaycan Rusiya və Ukraynaya əvəz tapıldı

Tiger named 'Putin' dies at Minnesota Zoo

Ukrainian fightback gains ground west of Kyiv

Ukraine war: Ukrainian fightback gains ground west of Kyiv KYIV - Ukrainian troops are counter-attacking Russian forces in some areas of the country, with reports that they have gained ground near the capital, Kyiv. Local authorities in the town of Makariv, west of Kyiv, said Ukrainian flags were flying there once more. And a US defence spokesman said Ukrainians were reversing battlefield momentum in some parts of the south. Volunteers and Ukrainian troops in the small southern town of Voznesensk destroyed an armoured convoy and pushed back Russian forces. And in Kherson, close to the Crimean peninsula and the first city to fall to Russia, Ukrainian forces are also trying to recapture territory. However, the latest assessment from the UK Ministry of Defence says Russian troops in Ukraine are moving in from the north and south to "envelop Ukrainian forces in the east of the country". The note says "Russian forces are likely reorganising before resuming large-scale offensive operations". Russian forces are also continuing to bombard the southern port city of Mariupol, although the port area itself is said to have suffered relatively little damage. Justin Bronk, from the UK defence and security think tank the Royal United Services Institute (Rusi), said the Ukrainian pushback came as the Russians were trying to compensate for their lack of progress so far. "The Russians have quite visibly failed to take the whole of Ukraine across multiple positions of advance," he told the BBC. "So now they are trying to pull their resources back and consolidate them and concentrate them on one push at a time - in particular around Mariupol and the south." He said that if the Russians took Mariupol, which has been besieged for weeks and is low on supplies, then they might look to redistribute troops and ammunition, first to Ukraine's eastern Donbas region and then perhaps to the north-eastern city of Kharkiv. But as Ukraine pushes Russian troops back around Irpin, about 20km (12 miles) from Kyiv, and other suburbs along with Makariv, it could hamper Moscow's plans to capture the capital, he added. "Essentially, what [Ukrainian forces] are trying to do is cut off an entire side of the attempted encirclement of Kyiv, which would force the Russians to either try to break north and abandon those positions, or for Russia to reroute significant combat power to try to break through and release their own forces there." The Pentagon gave more details of the Ukrainian counter-offensive on Tuesday, saying it has seen increasing signs in recent days that Russians are being dislodged from areas they previously held. Spokesman John Kirby told CNN that he was unable to confirm reports from Ukrainian officials that they had retaken at least one town and expected to take more in coming days. However, he said it would be "consistent with the kind of fighting and the kinds of capabilities we have seen the Ukrainians use". He said Russian forces had "stalled" and were running out of fuel and food. There were also communication problems between air and ground forces, with some Russian fighters resorting to mobile phones to speak to each other, Mr Kirby said. "They are slowed," he said, adding that this was partly due to "their own ineptitude". Another Pentagon official, speaking anonymously, told the AFP news agency that some Russian soldiers had been laid low with frostbite, because they did not have the appropriate cold weather clothing for the terrain. The official said that because of losses and other problems, Russian forces inside Ukraine were now below 90% of their available combat power. - BBC

Zəncəfilin bitməyən faydaları, dəmlənmə qaydası...

Kokoslu Türk Paxlavası | Recipe and preparation of Turkish Baklava with ...

Baku White City - Bakı Ağ Şəhərin içərisindəki yollar

St Helens dog attack: Girl aged 17 months killed at home

A 17-month-old girl has died after being attacked by a dog in her home. Bella-Rae Birch died in hospital after the attack in St Helens at about 15:50 GMT on Monday, Merseyside Police said. Officers said her "absolutely devastated" family had only bought the dog a week ago. Police will carry out tests on the animal, which was killed by officers, to see if it was an illegal breed, as well as trying to identify its previous owners. The attack happened at the family's home in Bidston Avenue in the Blackbrook area of St Helens. One neighbour, who is due to go to university to train as a paramedic, said the child's parents were "hysterical". "We pulled up from school and heard screaming. I just ran over to try to help and started CPR until the paramedics took over," she said. "I didn't see the dog, I was just focusing on helping the baby." Another neighbour who helped to give CPR said: "The parents doted on the children. It's too upsetting to say anything else." Neighbour Joanne Matthews said she saw an ambulance outside the house and then about 10 police vehicles arrived. "I saw them bring the dog out. I couldn't tell what breed it was but from the back it looked like a Staffordshire bull terrier or pit bull," she said. Ms Matthews, 53, said the toddler was "a beautiful little girl". "I'd see the family in passing, just to say hello, and they were always very pleasant," she said. Another neighbour, who did not want to be named, said she got home when the area was busy with police. "The mum was on the field at the front of the house crying. She was hysterical," she said. "It is usually very quiet here and safe for children, but when you hear something like this has happened it is so distressing." Two police officers remain at the family's home this morning. The streets are quiet as people come to terms with the tragedy. It is the early stages of the investigation and police are carrying out house-to-house inquiries and looking at CCTV footage. As officers conduct tests to see what breed of dog it was, and try to trace its previous owners, they are also reassuring neighbours who are shocked and distressed at the attack. Anyone who witnessed anything in the area at the time, or who has information about the dog, has been asked to contact police. Supt Steve Brizell said the girl's death had "left a family and a community grieving and in complete shock". "The community of Blackbrook has woken up to the most tragic news," he said. "Bella-Rae has lost her life in the most unimaginably terrible circumstances. "Our thoughts are first and foremost with her family and the wider community at this devastating time." Merseyside Police and Crime Commissioner Emily Spurrell said she was "devastated to hear news that a young girl tragically lost her life". "Thoughts are with her family and loved ones," she tweeted. Ms Spurrell said the police and St Helens Council were supporting the family and the local community. St Helens Labour councillor Jeanie Bell said the girl's death was "absolutely awful". She tweeted: "I cannot begin to imagine the heartbreak for their family."

Health Benefits of Radish - Turpun sağlamlığa faydaları

The lonely funeral of a young soldier in Ukraine

There was no family around Dmytro Kotenko when they put him in the ground. Most likely, Kotenko's parents did not know their son was being buried that day in the Lychakiv Cemetery in Lviv. They were 600 miles away, with his two younger brothers, near the eastern city of Sumy, which was being so heavily shelled by Russian forces that it was cut off from the outside world. Kotenko's parents did know that their son was dead. He died on 26 February, the third day of the Russian invasion, near to the southern city of Kherson. It was his first operation. He was 21. Two days after his death, his parents received a call from his childhood friend Vadym Yarovenko, an artillery soldier, who broke the news. It had taken Yarovenko all night to work up the courage to make the call — a long and restless night on his army bunk in Lviv, alone with the knowledge that Kotenko was gone. They were just boys when they met, all of 15 years old, with fresh haircuts and new uniforms for their first day at military school. When they discovered they were from adjacent villages, it was the beginning of a friendship that might have lasted for a lifetime. Kotenko's father was a truck driver. His mother worked on a local farm. "To join the army meant to come up in the world," Yarovenko said. "I think this was part of the reason Dmytro signed up." The Kotenkos were a poor family, two parents and three sons, with a modest house in a small village on the Russian border in eastern Ukraine — the very people the Russian president Vladimir Putin claims he is rescuing from the yoke of Ukrainian oppression. Russia's annexation of Crimea in 2014, and the grinding war that followed in Donbas in eastern Ukraine, was another reason they signed up, Yarovenko said. "We knew that something like this could happen," he said, "and we would have to go and defend our land." When people from the village asked why they wanted to join the army in wartime, Kotenko would say, "If not me then who?" Yarovenko's father also drove a truck, and at the military school in Sumy the boys bonded over their love of cars. Yarovenko, an only child, had found something like a brother in Kotenko. "Neither of us liked the city-like entertainment, clubs etc," Yarovenko said. "We loved spending time in nature — fishing, hunting, picnics. We loved to go to the river with friends." They worked together on an old car — a Red Zhyguli — that Kotenko was fixing up on his family plot. They repaired motorbikes and drove them on the rural roads around home. They got to know each other's families. "Dmytro's parents loved him and he loved them," Yarovenko said, wiping tears from his cheeks. "Dmytro would always help them with repairs, he was good at that. Even at school or at the academy he would always help. He was very good to his parents. I never heard them argue." Yarovenko wanted to join an artillery unit but Kotenko's dream was to be a paratrooper. After two years at the academy they were separated — Yarovenko to the western city of Lviv to train for artillery and Kotenko to the southern city of Odesa to train to be a paratrooper. "We messaged each other every day," Yarovenko said. "We talked about everything. Regular things — how are you? What is happening where you are? We were close friends, we just talked." For a while last year, from July to October, they were reunited when Kotenko was stationed in Lviv. They went running together on the weekends and trained together. It was a happy time. On 31 December, their families got together to ring in the new year, and a month or so later Kotenko came to Lviv to visit Yarovenko before deploying south on an operation. They stayed up late talking. Along Ukraine's borders, Russia's forces were massed, waiting for orders to invade, but in Lviv life was normal and that night the war felt like a distant thing. The next morning, Kotenko and Yarovenko said their goodbyes and Kotenko went south. They continued messaging every day. On 26 February, Kotenko stopped responding, and Yarovenko feared the worst. Eventually he reached the commander of Kotenko's unit by phone, who told him his friend had been killed by a mortar shell. "I don't have all the details yet," Yarovenko said. "There was shelling, there was an explosion, Dmytro died."When he dialled the number for Kotenko's parents, there was still a phone connection, and in a short conversation he told them that their son was gone. When he tried to call later about the funeral, the aerial bombardment of Sumy had worsened and the line would not connect. He kept trying but the line stayed dead. So Kotenko's body was brought to Lviv and buried there without them, because the city was safe from falling shells. Yarovenko travelled alone from his base to the Saints Peter and Paul Garrison Church, and he stood alone on one side of the nave, under its vaulted ceiling painted with saints, as smoke from burning incense drifted over the priests and mourners. Next to where he stood, there are boards mounted with pictures of Ukraine's war dead. The first pictures were put up by the chaplains in 2014, to honour the fallen soldiers who had been members of the church. Then bereaved parents from around Lviv saw the pictures and wanted their sons and daughters to be there, and gradually the collection of portraits grew. "They bring us photographs because they know we pray every day for those who died in war," said Father Vsevolod, one of the chaplains. "We are part of this city's mission to bury army men and women with honours, so their acts of bravery are never forgotten." Before the invasion, the church held a funeral for a soldier once or twice a month, Father Vsevolod said. Now it was burying two or three men a day. None of the recent dead had yet been added to the wall of portraits. Kotenko was not there. But the pictures would be put up, Father Vsevolod said, and if a family was cut off and did not know their son was being buried in Lviv, the church would add it for them. On the day of Kotenko's funeral, there were three coffins in the church. One of the men was from a village near Lviv and the church was filled with his family and friends, and afterwards they took him home. The two other coffins went quietly to the Lychakiv Cemetery, with a small group of soldiers from a local unit who help to commemorate the dead. Kotenko was buried alongside Kyrylo Moroz, 25, a paratrooper from his unit, who could also not be taken home. They were laid to rest in a far corner of the cemetery, among the dead from the first and second world wars and the war with Russian-backed forces in Donbas. Kotenko and Moroz were the fourth and fifth men killed in this invasion to be buried at the Lychakiv. Their graves were almost bare, but for a bunch of roses and a bunch of asters laid by the church and marked with designation of their unit. The three other graves, for soldiers from Lviv, were festooned with flowers and lanterns. The following day, the gravediggers at the Lychakiv buried two more men. The day after, three. Eventually, the wooden crosses bearing their names will be replaced by headstones that will hold their memory here for good. "Thank God we do not have fighting yet here in Lviv," said the groundsman, "so we can bury the soldiers who are defending our home." Yarovenko is still trying to reach Kotenko's parents, but the line is dead. They are likely still trapped in Sumy. The invasion has robbed them first of their son, and then of one of the few things that might have ameliorated their grief — the right to be by his side when he went into the ground. As Kotenko's coffin was lowered, Yarovenko stood to one side, behind the honour guard that fired the guns. It was the saddest thing he had ever experienced. "I watched my friend being buried far from his home," he said. Afterwards, he stood silently, looking at the grave, the sole mourner left, alone with the gravediggers as they cleared away their tools. "We never got the chance to meet at the front," he said. All that was left was the hope of speaking to Kotenko's parents soon, and the memory of their son, which he will carry with him as he waits for his turn to fight and carry with him to the frontline when he goes.

Ukrainian orphans heading to Scotland stuck in Poland as flight to London delayed over paperwork

Orphans evacuated from Ukraine by an Edinburgh charity have been delayed in flying to the UK due to paperwork problems. The children from Dnipro, who range from infants to young adults, were due to fly from Poland to London with carers on Monday, then travel to Scotland. However, a document from the Ukrainian government was not sent in time. The Virgin flight is not expected to take place before Wednesday. The charity Dnipro Kids, which was set up by Hibs FC fans, enabled the children to flee Ukraine for Poland. The Home Office said delays took place due to problems authorising the backgrounds of the children, who do not have family members to act on their behalf. A spokesperson added: "It is right that we only move these children once we have the full, written agreement of their home and host governments."The home secretary and her counterparts in the Ukrainian, Polish and Scottish government are united in their determination to ensure these children get the support and care they need." The children were due to arrive in Scotland on Wednesday - initially spending a few weeks in Callander before moving to Edinburgh. They have been staying at a hotel while Home Office paperwork was completed. Home Secretary Priti Patel announced last week that the Ukrainian authorities had confirmed they would be allowed to seek temporary sanctuary in Scotland. The SNP's Westminster leader, Ian Blackford, said: "We've been up against a race against time to get the paperwork that needs to be in place signed off on and there's been a delay on that. "So, for the time being, it means that nothing is going to happen today." He said the children's welfare had to come first, adding: "I will work with all to make sure this is brought to a safe conclusion." Dnipro Kids chairman Steven Carr, who led the evacuation effort from Lviv in Ukraine and Poland, travelled to Poland on Monday to accompany the group on their flight to London. Mr Carr added: "In Ukraine they have what they call family-type orphanages where they have groups of children together with an orphanage mother who takes care of them. We have no intention of splitting these groups up. "The mothers have to stay with them, they are the legal guardians. "They are coming here and we are going to look after them, but it is only until such a time as they can go back to Ukraine." But he said the situation in Ukraine was horrendous and very worrying for the orphanage mothers and the older children who understand what is happening in their home country. Mr Carr also paid tribute to Mr Blackford, who has been working with the charity to secure the children's passage to the UK. Up to 3,000 people fleeing the conflict in Ukraine will be offered immediate temporary accommodation in Scotland. The Scottish government has also announced a further £15m of funding will be made available to help refugees, including £11m for local councils and £2.5m for temporary accommodation.

Qarğıdalının orqanizmə 12 faydası – Açıqlamaya bax

Kənd Qoxusu mağazası kənd məhsullarını evinizə gətirir

Meanings of Flowers - Çiçeklerin Anlamları - Orkidenin Anlamı

David Beckham hands Instagram account to Ukrainian doctor in Kharkiv

Former England captain David Beckham handed control of his Instagram account to a Ukrainian doctor in the city of Kharkiv on Sunday. Dr Iryna, head of a regional perinatal centre, spent the day posting videos about the work medical professionals are doing in the midst of the conflict.Footage showed newborns being treated and a basement to which patients have had to be moved to escape shelling. Beckham, 46, has more than 71 million followers on Instagram. The former Manchester United and Real Madrid star said he wanted to highlight the "amazing work Iryna and health workers like her are doing to save lives in Ukraine".Dr Iryna, who as well as running the centre serves as a paediatric anaesthesiologist, said her work had been "24/7" since the Russian invasion."The first days were the most difficult. We had to learn how to work with bombings and strikes," she said. "We are probably risking our lives but we don't think about it at all. We love our work. Doctors and nurses here, we worry, we cry but none of us will give up."Kharkiv is Ukraine's second biggest city and has been the target of Russian shelling for more than three weeks. Dr Iryna described how, on the first day of the war, all pregnant women and mothers had to be moved into the basement of the centre."It was a terrible three hours that we spent together," she said.She added that babies receiving intensive care had to remain upstairs because the life-saving equipment on which they depended could not be moved.Beckham also encouraged his followers to donate to Unicef, a UN aid agency for which he serves as an ambassador.He and wife Victoria, who was a singer with the Spice Girls, are reported to have donated £1million to help fund the organisation's work in Ukraine.

Bricklaying: How To Build A Brick Wall

Naxışlı şəkərburanın hazırlanması - Making patterned "Shekerbura"

Azərspace peykində HD TV kanalları qəbul etmək üçün video təlimat

Kənddə yaşamaq - Axşam inəyi sağıb, yemliyirik və səhəri quşların səsiyl...

Baş Göynük Quru çayda güclü sel

"Kənd Qoxusu" ərzaq məhsulları mağazasının ilk filialı fəaliyyətə başladı

Calf and Man - A story of Azerbaijan

Spring has come to Europe

Cats Street in Baku

Operation to rescue the trapped beetle

Bakının ən gözəl parklarından - Yeni meşə tipli "Yasamal Parkı"

On the morning of Baku

Fire wednesday guys in Azerbaijan - Bakıda od çərşənbəsi uşaqlar tonqaldan tullanır

Wind Wednesday around the bonfire Baku - Tonqal ətrafında Yel çərşənbəsi Bakı

Baş Göynük kəndi çay kənarına geden yol

Russian army generals killed in Ukraine have been announced

The Ukrainian Armed Forces have published a list of Russian generals killed in the country.

The statement came from the Strategic Communications Department of the General Command of the Armed Forces of Ukraine.

During the three weeks of the war, Ukrainian soldiers killed more than 10 high-ranking Russian army officers, including at least six generals.

According to the list, Major General Magomed Tushayev, Commander of the 141st Motorized Rifle Regiment of the National Guard, Major General Vitaly Gerasimov (First Deputy Commander of the 41st Army of the Central Military District), Major General Andrey Kolesnikov (Commander of the 29th Army of the Eastern Military District), Major General Andrei Sukhovetsky (Deputy Commander of the 41st Army of the Central Military District), Major General Oleg Mityaev (Commander of the 150th Motorized Rifle Division), Lieutenant General Andrei Mordvichev (Commander of the 8th Guards United Armed Forces of the Southern Military District) were neutralized .

"Of course, no one is talking about the loss of generals in Russia at the federal level. The name of the official head of the "special operation in Ukraine" in Russia has not been announced yet, "the Ukrainian Armed Forces added.

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Ukrainian ballet star Artem Datsyshyn dies after Russian shelling


Leading Ukrainian ballet dancer Artem Datsyshyn has died, almost three weeks after being injured in Russian shelling in Kyiv, according to reports. Datsyshyn, 43, a former soloist at the National Opera of Ukraine, died in hospital, friend Tatiana Borovik said. She spoke of her "heartache" at the news in a Facebook post. Anatoly Solovyanenko, chief stage director at the National Opera of Ukraine, paid tribute to him as "a great artist" and "a wonderful man". Russian-American choreographer Alexei Ratmansky also expressed his sadness. Alexei Ratmansky: ARTYOM DATSISHIN, a principal dancer with National Opera House of Ukraine died today in the Kyiv hospital from wounds received on February 26 when he got caught under Russian artillery fire. He was a beautiful dancer loved by his colleagues. Unbearable pain. Ratmansky, a former principal dancer in Kyiv and former artistic director of the Bolshoi Ballet in Moscow, is now artist in residence at the American Ballet Theatre in New York. He said Datsyshyn died from "wounds received on February 26 when he got under Russian artillery fire".

Astara məktəblisi təqaüdlə dünyanın top universitetini qazandı

Zapp Family Travel 22 years in 90-year-old car, visits 102 - ENGLİSH SUB...

Göynüklülərin Qarasovdan maşınla ot apardıqları görüntülər

Peaceful day, Sounds of "Birds of Spring" by Dima Teo

Tualet quyusu qazan zaman quyudakı böyük daşı yandıraraq partlatmaq məcburiyyəti

Baş Göynük Yuxarı Dömürt və Quru cay səhər tezdən

Shaki is a city in northwestern Azerbaijan - Şəkinin möhtəşəm gecə görüntüləri

Children's joy of snow in Baku - Bakıda uşaqların qar sevinci

Cat mom preserving for rescuers to... - Ana pişik balasını metroda gizlətdi

Helping a stray or lost animals - Küçə itləri üçün yuva

Longing Waiting For The Train ... But to love and be loved, that’s every...

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Torpaq çərşənbəsi - İlaxır çərşənbəniz mübarək

Russian losses in Ukraine March 14 - Rusiyanın Ukraynada martın 14-nə qə...

Limonlu və qozlu keks resepti - Lemon and walnut cake

Bees collect honey from flowers

Şəkidə güclü ildırım çaxır, leysan yağışı yağır - Möhtəşəm görüntülər |...

Notbookların təmizlənməsi - HP Notebook - 15-r197nr

Calf savagely kicks man who was beating cows with a stick

Evdə dadlı, yumşaq və asan PİZZA hazırlama RESEPTİ - Perfect

Yağda şəkərbura (Fındıq çörəyi) bişirmək - resepti | How to make sheker...

Caucasian - Traditional Azerbaijani stuffed eggplants, peppers and tomatoes

Evdə çörək bişirməyin sadə üsulu - Yumşaq olması üçün nələr etməli?

The Maiden Tower in Baku, Old City - İçəri şəhər Qız qalası

Beautiful refreshing journeys • Azerbaijanian Nature & Relaxing music

The beauties of nature, lilac flowers - Təbiətin gözəllikləri, Yasəmən ç...

Magnificent images of bees, cherry blossoms - Arılarının möhtəşəm görünt...

One morning in the village - Kəntdə açılan bir səhər

Nature is good for our brains - Nature helps us cope with stress

Tərəvəz yetişdirməyin yolları - Grow vegetables at home

Rain and music - Yağış və musiqi

Fenerbahçe 1-3 Galatasaray: Tarihi qalibiyyət (FB 1-3 GS) - Bakü muhteşem

"Sevgililer" gününde romantik yağış - Sevginin günü olmaz; sevgiler gönüldedir

Bakıda yağışlı hava davam edir, az əvvəl sulu qar ...

Hindquşlarının çoxaldılması,saxlanması və yemləndirilməsi | Yeni məlumat açıqlamada

Şin çayı - Şeki Baş Göynük kendi

Cəlilabadda DƏHŞƏTLİ QƏZADA ölən 5 nəfərin və yaralanan 3 nəfərin kimliy...

"Ac qurdlar bostanı talan etdi" - Şəkidə bostanda qarpız yığımı

Baku Nizami Street (Tarqovu) - 28.11.2019

Göynükdə güclü yağış əkin sahələrini basdı

Şəkiyə ilk qar yağıb - Baş Göynük 22.11.2019

Kəntdə gündəlik yaşam tərzi, toyuqları yemləmək, tərəvəzləri yığmaq

Şəki, Baş Göynük girişindən yaylağına kimi möhtəşəm görüntüləri

Wild beehive - Non residential house | İllərdir yaşayış olmayan ev - Eşe...

Qax və Şəkiyə güclü qar yağır: Kəndlərdə qarın qalınlığı 30 santimetrə ç...

Şəki - Göynük kəndinin dağları

Göynüyün Dağları | Sheki - Mountains of the Goynuk