After the 1987 census, the Iraqi regime declared Shabaks to be Arabs. Many Shabak community leaders protested, insisting that they were Kurds, after which the Iraqi regime began a campaign against Shabaks. Many Shabaks chose to abandon their traditions, stop identifying with Kurds, and assimilate into the Arab identity to avoid being targeted. The Iraqi government fabricated lineage documents to portray the Shabaks as Arabs. The campaign included both deportation and forced assimilation, and many Shabaks were relocated to concentration camps near the
Harir area located to the north of Erbil. An estimated 1,160 Shabaks were killed during this period. In addition, increasing efforts have been made to force the Shabaks to suppress their own identity in favour of being Arab. The Iraqi government's efforts of
forced assimilation,
Arabization, and religious persecution put the Shabaks under increasing threat. A researcher interviewed a Shabak survivor, who stated that "the government said we are Arabs, not Kurds; but if we are, why did they deport us from our homes?" Furthermore, he claimed that Shabaks were direct descendants of the original Kurds. After the end of Baathist Iraq, the newer Shia-dominated Iraqi government maintained the practice of attempting to distance Shabaks from Kurds. Politically, the Shabaks who identified as Kurds supported the Kurdistan Region and mostly supported the KDP, while the Shabaks who identified as a distinct group supported the central Iraqi government and mostly supported Iran-backed militias. Hunain al-Qaddo, a Shabak politician who advocated that Shabaks were a distinct ethnic group, claimed that "the
Peshmerga have no genuine interest in protecting his community, and that Kurdish security forces are more interested in controlling Shabaks and their leaders than protecting them." Meanwhile, Salim al-Shabaki claimed that it was actually the Iraqi Shia militias who had no interest in protecting the Shabaks and only wanted to distance Shabaks from other Kurds. He also accused the Shia militias of committing atrocities against Shabaks who did not benefit their agenda. After the decline of
Shabakism during the Iraqi civil war, most Shabaks were Muslims, with a significant Yarsani minority and a small Christian minority. Shabak Muslims were around 70% Shia and 30% Sunni. Religion was a factor in the identification of Shabaks. The Shia Shabaks were divided between those who identified as Kurds and those who identified as a separate group, while the Sunni and Yarsani Shabaks identified as Kurds. Some of them migrated to the KRG and integrated well. The Shabaks who identified as Kurds sided with the KRG and mostly supported the KDP. The Shabaks who identified as a distinct ethnic group supported the Iran-backed militias. In the 1990s and 2000s, Shabaks were also targets of
Turkification by Turkish groups and their
Iraqi Turkmen allies. The Iraqi Turkmen National Party (ITMP) actively ran a campaign aimed at convincing Shabaks that they were Turks. In addition to Shabaks, the ITMP claimed that all Yarsanis were Turks, and that Yarsanism was a Turkic religion. After the Anfal campaign, the ITMP received aid consisting of food packages from Turkey. The ITMP caused controversy as they did not give any aid to the Shabak victims unless they signed documents agreeing that they were Turks. By 2003, the Turkification attempts had stopped, as they never had a lasting effect on the Shabaks. Shabaks had tensions with Sunni Arabs, which was worsened by Saddam Hussein, and further worsened by the rise of the
Islamic State in 2014. The situation of Shabaks and
Feyli Kurds in Iraq was identical, and both groups complained about being alienated from Sunni Kurds who saw them as Shia, and from Shia Arabs who saw them as Kurds. During the
2017 Kurdistan independence referendum, there were Shabaks who supported independence and called for their native region in the
Nineveh Plains to be included. == Settlements ==