The Arabization policy involved forced evictions, land confiscation, and changing the administrative boundaries of the Kirkuk region to reduce the proportion of Kurds and other non-Arab populations. During this period, Kurdish and Turkmen residents were forced to sign "nationality correction" forms, requiring them to identify as Arabs or face expulsion. Many Kurdish families were displaced to remote areas or neighboring provinces, while Arab families from central and southern Iraq were encouraged to settle in Kirkuk, often receiving government incentives such as housing and employment. Additionally, the government changed the names of neighborhoods and towns to reflect Arab heritage, erasing many elements of Kurdish and Turkmen identity. The Ba'athist government allegedly settled Palestinians in homes of Kurds and Turkmen, and it attracted more attention when
Jalal Talabani spoke on it, and called for Kurds and Turkmen to put their differences aside to reclaim their homes.
Post-2003 Following the fall of Saddam Hussein's regime in 2003, there were efforts by displaced Kurds and Turkmen to reclaim their homes and lands. In 2014, following the successful
ISIS offensive against Iraqi governmental forces and the withdrawal of the latter from parts of northern Iraq, including Kirkuk, the city was seized by Kurdish
Peshmerga. In 2016,
Amnesty International published a report documenting the
Kurdification of Kirkuk carried out by the Peshmerga. The report highlighted incidents of bulldozing Arab homes and banishing the residents throughout the period of Kurdish control of the city. Senior Crisis Response Advisor Donatella Rovera stated, “
KRG forces appear to be spearheading a concerted campaign to forcibly displace Arab communities by destroying entire villages in areas they have recaptured from
IS in northern Iraq”. In 2017, Kurdistan Region sought to
secede from Iraq by holding a
referendum of independence which was rejected by the government of Iraq. This triggered the
2017 Iraqi-Kurdish conflict wherein Iraqi forces attacked the Peshmerga, defeating them,
retaking control of Kirkuk and causing large numbers of Kurds to flee, leading to yet another saga of demographic change. Immediately after the conflict, Iraqi Kurds were markedly concerned about the resumption of Arabization in Kirkuk. By 2024, local leaders continued to report ongoing efforts by the Iraqi central government to implement policies resembling the earlier Arabization strategies, causing heightened tensions between the different ethnic groups in the region. Describing the Arabization as reaching a “critical level”,
Kurdistan24 reported that since Iraqi forces retook control, more than 100,000 Arab families have been resettled from other cities to the center and surrounding areas of Kirkuk. == Human rights violations ==