It is a very small percentage; I would be surprised if it were greater than 1% of all Kurds in northern Iraq. Many more Christians in Iraqi Kurdistan are non-Kurds who have fled to Kurdistan to seek Kurdish protection, like Assyrians, Armenians, and Chaldeans.
The main ethnic groups in Turkey are Turks, Kurds, Arabs, and others such as Circassians, Bosniaks, and Albanians. Turks make up the majority of the population, while Kurds are the largest minority group. These ethnic groups have diverse cultures, languages, and histories.
It depends on whether you consider "Arab" to be a united ethnic group or if it is divisible along ethno-religious lines. If Sunni Arabs and Shiite Arabs are distinct ethnic groups, then Sunni Arabs form Iraq's second largest ethnic group (after Shiite Arabs). If the Arabs are a united ethnic group, then the Kurds form the next largest ethnic group.
The Kurdish people have a homeland that spans parts of Turkey, Iraq, and Iran. They are an ethnic minority group and have historically faced challenges in seeking autonomy and recognition within these countries.
Approximately 73% of Iraq's population is urban, with the majority living in cities such as Baghdad, Basra, and Mosul. Urbanization in Iraq has increased rapidly in recent years due to factors like population growth and rural-to-urban migration.
The top three most populated cities in Iraq are Baghdad, Basra, and Mosul. Baghdad, the capital city, is the most populous, followed by Basra, a major port city in the south, and Mosul, located in northern Iraq.
They are the Kurds in northern Iraq.
kurds; northern Iraq
The Kurds. The Kurds in Iraq are still under attack from Turkey and Iran.
There are quite a number of ethnicities in northern Iraq, but the most numerous and most famous is the KURDS. Other ethnic groups in northern Iraq include: Assyrians, Arabs, Turkmen/Turcoman, Shabakis, and Yezidis.
There are around 6.5–7.9 million Kurds in Iran and 6.2–6.5 million Kurds in Iraq, so there are more Kurds in Iran. However, as the Iranian population overall is significantly larger, Kurds make up a more significant percentage of the population in Iraq.
The minority in question is the Kurds.
Kurds
Kurds have not ruled Iraq, but they have had periods of semi-autonomy in the Kurdish region of northern Iraq, particularly after the establishment of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in 1992 following the First Gulf War. The KRG has its own parliament, government, and security forces, operating within the framework of the Iraqi constitution.
Eastern Turkey, northern Iraq, northwestern Iran, and Northern Syria are heavily inhabited by Kurds. There are no countries actually names Kurdistan but there is a Province in Iran by that name.
Kurds.
Arabs are more, kurds are about 17% of Iraq, they are about 4-5 million kurds in Iraq (there are more than 20 million kurds in the world), the kurds grew more and more powerful in Iraq, now the president of Iraq is a kurd.
The Kurds are the most populous ethnic group in northern Iraq, but there are other minorities such as Arabs, Turkmen, Yazidi, Azeri, Turkish, and Persian.