Christians in the Nineveh Plains: Focusing on Possible Self-Governance for Minorities

Authors

  • Zaianddin Mawlood Khidhir Department of International Relations Actual classification, Institute of International, Political and Regional Studies, Corvinus University of Budapest, Budapest, Hungary
  • Rostovanyi Zsolt Department of International Relations Actual classification, Institute of International, Political and Regional Studies, Corvinus University of Budapest, Budapest, Hungary
  • Zubir Rasool Ahmed Department of international relations, College of political science, Salahaddin University, Erbil, Kurdistan,Iraq

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.26750/Vol(7).No(3).Paper18

Keywords:

Christians, Nineveh Plains, Self-Governance, Minorities

Abstract

A deeply complicated situation characterizes Mesopotamia and its neighborhood, with a lasting solution to the fate of minorities in the region yet to be comprehended. In this secondary study, the central purpose is to investigate issues and the fate of Christians in the Nineveh Plains, ranging from their dream for self-governance to the displaced nightmare. Particularly, the study seeks to gain insight into prospects of self-governance for minorities, shedding light on some of the platforms that the affected communities could exploit to realize this dream, as well as major hurdles that they might encounter. The study’s specific objectives include the examination of the current degree of success in Iraqi minorities’ quest for self-governance, some of the challenges facing the community, and some of the feasible solutions that are worth embracing. From the findings, some of the challenges facing Iraqi minorities’ quest for self-governance are seen to include the KRG harassment and land seizures and the labelling of Yazidis as Kurds due to political factors, translating into irritation. Another hurdle is that Peshmerga soldiers are an unpredictable threat, especially after they abandoned Yazidi and Christian villages during the onslaught by ISIS. Therefore, self-governance and self-determination are the key factors that would necessitate chances of Iraqi minorities’ survival, but the reconciliation process requires interventions by international organizations such as those in the West, with the United States Institute of Peace (USIP) unexceptional.

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Published

2020-08-21

How to Cite

Khidhir, Z. M., Zsolt, R., & Ahmed, Z. R. (2020). Christians in the Nineveh Plains: Focusing on Possible Self-Governance for Minorities. Journal of University of Raparin, 7(3), 415–436. https://doi.org/10.26750/Vol(7).No(3).Paper18

Issue

Section

Humanities & Social Sciences