Hubbry Logo
search
logo
Zakho
Zakho
current hub
2150715

Zakho

logo
Community Hub0 Subscribers
Read side by side
from Wikipedia

Zakho, also spelled Zaxo (Kurdish: زاخۆ, romanizedZaxo or Zaco,[3][4] Syriac: ܙܵܟ݂ܘܿ, romanizedZāḵō,[5] Armenian: Զախո,[6] Arabic: زاخو,[7] Lishanid Noshan: זאכו, romanized: Zāxo[8]) is a city in Kurdistan Region, Iraq, at the centre of the Zakho District of the Dohuk Governorate, located a few kilometers from the Ibrahim Khalil border crossing. Zakho is known for its celebrations of Newroz.

Key Information

The population of the town rose from about 30,000 in 1950 to 350,000 in 1992 due to Kurds fleeing from other areas of the country.[9]

The original settlement may have been on a small island in the Little Khabur river, which flows west through the modern city to form the border between Iraq and Turkey, continuing into the Tigris. Other important rivers in the area are the Zeriza and the Seerkotik.[10]

History

[edit]

Gertrude Bell, the renowned British archaeologist and Arabist who advised British governors in the region in the closing years of the British Mandate, was convinced that Zakho was the same place as the ancient town of Hasaniyeh. She also reported that one of the first Christian missionaries to the region, the Dominican friar Poldo Soldini, was buried there in 1779. His grave was still a pilgrimage destination in the 1950s.[11][12]

The town is also the site of Zakho castle, of which today only the tower remains, and of Qubad Pasha castle, a hexagonal structure in Zakho cemetery.

According to an oral tradition transmitted by a Jewish informant from Zakho, Me'allim Levi, Zakho was established in 1568 by Slivani tribesmen, whose territory was stretched south of the location of the town. The family of Shamdin Agha came originally from the Slivani tribe, settled in Zakho, and became the most prominent family in Zakho. From the late 19th century onwards, the family of Shamdin Agha ruled "all the Muslims, Jews and Christians of Zakho and its surroundings."[13] Zakho was known to the ancient Greeks. In 1844, the traveller William Francis Ainsworth commented: "The appearance of Zakho in the present day coincides in a remarkable manner with what it was described to be in the time of Xenophon."

Zakho is a major marketplace with its goods and merchandise serving the Kurdish-controlled area and most of north and central Iraq. Writing in 1818, Campanile[who?] described the town as a great trading centre, famous for its gallnuts as well as rice, oil, sesame, wax, lentils and many fruits.[12]

Recent history

[edit]
Joint forces headquarters in Zakho, 1993

Due to its strategic location and the abundance of job opportunities, Zakho has attracted many workers and job seekers from different parts of Iraq and even from Syria and Turkey. Trade with Turkey is now the major element of the economy.[14] Oil drilling began in 2005.[15]

Islamic history

[edit]

In Islamic history it is perhaps best remembered as the location of the Battle of the Zab between the Umayyads and the Abbasids.

The river forms the approximate political boundary of Kurdistan Regional Government area of Iraq today. Its sister, the Little (or Lower) Zab rises in north-western part of Kurdistan province Iran, in the north of Piranshahr city and flows south-west through Iraq to join the Tigris north of the town of Baiji. The Dukan Dam straddles the Little Zab some 150 miles upstream from its confluence with the Tigris River. Constructed between 1954 and 1959, the dam has a total discharge capability of 4,300 cms. The power station, constructed in 1979, holds five water turbines and provides 400 MW of electrical energy.

In 1991, Zakho was illegally occupied by the British and the Americans during the Gulf War in "Operation Provide Comfort", to provide support to the Kurdish rebellion against the Iraqi government. Most of the inhabitants of the city had fled to the mountains. In the following years, the city came under the control of the Kurdistan Autonomous Region and many of its Kurdish citizens began to return to the city.[16]

The 27 February 1995 Zakho bombing killed over 50 people. When the U.S. Army closed its military base in Zakho in 1996, they evacuated several thousand Kurds who had connections to the base and who feared reprisals. Many of them were given asylum in the USA. According to David McDowall, this constituted a sudden brain drain, with Zakho losing many of its most educated citizens.[17]

In 2008 it was reported that the Turkish Armed Forces maintained four bases in Zakho District, under an agreement concluded with the Iraqi government in the 1990s.[18]

The 2011 Dohuk riots, which targeted Assyrian-owned businesses, were sparked by Kurdish Muslim clerics in the town.[19]

Christianity

[edit]
St. George Chaldean Cathedral in Zakho.

The city was the center of a large Chaldean Catholic diocese up until the middle of the nineteenth century, when it was divided into three dioceses: Amadia, Zakho, and Akra-Zehbar.[citation needed] The Armenians of Zakho established their community after the Armenian genocide, with the first Armenian church in the city being established in 1923.[20]

Judaism

[edit]

Zakho was formerly known for its synagogues and a large, ancient Jewish community. In the middle of the 19th century, Zakho became the chief spiritual center for the Jews of Kurdistan, and many sources refer to it as yerušalayim de-kurdistan 'the Jerusalem of Kurdistan.'[21][22][23]

The banks of the nearby Khabur River are mentioned in the Bible as one of the places to which the Israelites were exiled (1 Chronicles, 5:26,[24] 2 Kings 17:6,[25] 2 Kings 18:11[26]).

The Jews spoke the Jewish Neo-Aramaic dialect of Zakho and were also fluent in Kurmanji, the language spoken by non-Jewish Kurds.[27]


Kurdish society was primarily a tribal one. The Jews of Zakho bore arms like Kurdish Muslims.[28] There was an attack on the Jews in 1891, when one of the synagogues was burnt down. The troubles intensified in 1892.

Most of the Jews relocated to Israel in the 1950s.[29] While the Jews of Zakho were among the least literate in the diaspora, they had a unique and rich oral tradition, known for its legends, epics and ballads, whose heroes came from both Jewish and Muslim traditions.[30]

Climate

[edit]

Zakho has a hot-summer Mediterranean climate (Csa in the Köppen climate classification) with very hot, dry summers, and cool wet winters.

Climate data for Zakho
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Mean daily maximum °C (°F) 10.2
(50.4)
12.2
(54.0)
16.5
(61.7)
21.8
(71.2)
29.1
(84.4)
36.2
(97.2)
40.4
(104.7)
40.0
(104.0)
35.7
(96.3)
27.9
(82.2)
19.4
(66.9)
12.3
(54.1)
25.1
(77.3)
Mean daily minimum °C (°F) 1.9
(35.4)
3.1
(37.6)
6.1
(43.0)
10.1
(50.2)
15.0
(59.0)
20.1
(68.2)
23.7
(74.7)
23.2
(73.8)
19.2
(66.6)
13.7
(56.7)
8.4
(47.1)
3.9
(39.0)
12.4
(54.3)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 144
(5.7)
136
(5.4)
129
(5.1)
109
(4.3)
43
(1.7)
0
(0)
0
(0)
0
(0)
1
(0.0)
27
(1.1)
83
(3.3)
127
(5.0)
799
(31.6)
Source: [31]

Landmarks

[edit]
Delal Bridge

One of Zakho's famous landmarks is the Delal Bridge, made of stone.

Zakho Castle lies in the city centre on the western bank of the Khabur. It served as the governor's house in the reign of the Badinan Emirate and was enlarged by Prince Ali Khan. It was built on the ruins of an older castle. Today, only the castle's tower remains.

Sharansh waterfall

The Qubad Pasha Castle, in Zakho's cemetery, is hexagonal, with six windows and an entrance gate.[32]

Population displacements

[edit]

In 2007, the UNHCR reported that there were still 10,000 internally displaced persons in the Zakho district as a result of the Iraq War.[33]

Sports

[edit]

Zakho Football Club (Zakho FC) was founded in 1987. The sports club plays in the Iraq Stars League, where only the top 20 Iraqi football clubs play. Zakho FC has its own stadium with a capacity of 20,000 seats.

Football Stadium of Zakho

Zakho Basketball Club (Zakho SC) won the Kurdistan Basketball Super Cup and beat Duhok SC in Erbil.[34]

Notable people

[edit]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]

Sources

[edit]
[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Zakho is a city and district in the Dohuk Governorate of the Kurdistan Region in Iraq, situated 53 kilometers north of Duhok and bordering Turkey to the north and Syria to the west.[1] With an estimated population of around 300,000 as of 2021, the area spans 1,378 square kilometers and features a majority of Kurdish Muslims alongside Christian minorities such as Chaldeans, Syriac Catholics, and Armenians.[1] Established as a district under Mosul since 1864 during the Ottoman era and later integrated into the Duhuk Governorate in 1970, Zakho gained special administrative status in 2021.[1] The city functions as a vital commercial and trade center, primarily due to its proximity to the Ibrahim Al Khalil border crossing with Turkey, facilitating cross-border commerce and positioning Zakho as an emerging industrial hub.[1][2] A defining landmark is the ancient Delal Bridge, a pre-Islamic stone structure over 114 meters long with five arches, referenced in 10th-century records and symbolizing the region's engineering heritage.[3] Recent developments, including international trade fairs and infrastructure projects, underscore Zakho's growing economic role in the Kurdistan Region.[4]

Geography

Location and Borders

Zakho serves as the administrative center of Zakho District within Dohuk Governorate in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, positioned at approximately 37°09′N 42°41′E.[5] The city lies in close proximity to the international borders with Turkey to the north and Syria to the west, situated about 10 kilometers south of the Ibrahim Khalil border crossing with Turkey and roughly 25 kilometers east of the Iraqi-Syrian border.[1] This positioning places Zakho near the broader tripoint area where Iraq, Turkey, and Syria converge, enhancing its role in regional connectivity.[6] The urban area of Zakho is traversed by the Khabur River, which contributes to its hydrological setting and supports local topography at an elevation of around 440 meters above sea level.[7] Primary road networks link Zakho southward to Dohuk city, the provincial capital, approximately 50 kilometers away, and eastward toward Erbil via highways that facilitate inter-regional movement.[8] These routes, including the strategic dual carriageway extending from the Ibrahim Khalil crossing to interior points like Bachika village, underscore Zakho's function as a nodal point for north-south and east-west transit without extending into commercial specifics.[9]

Climate and Environment

Zakho features a hot-summer Mediterranean climate (Köppen classification Csa), with marked seasonal variations driven by its position in the foothills of the Zagros Mountains. Summers, from June to August, are intensely hot and arid, with average high temperatures reaching 38–40°C (100–104°F) and lows around 21–22°C (70–72°F), while winters from December to February bring cooler conditions, with highs of 10–15°C (50–59°F) and lows occasionally dipping to 0°C (32°F) or below, rarely exceeding -1°C (30°F). [10] [11] Precipitation is concentrated in the wet season spanning October to May, totaling approximately 400–600 mm annually, with the heaviest rains falling between November and March, influenced by westerly disturbances channeled through the surrounding mountainous terrain. The Zagros Mountains enhance orographic effects, leading to localized microclimates with higher rainfall on windward slopes compared to leeward areas, though this also contributes to variability, including episodic heavy downpours. [12] [13] The Zakho River, traversing the city, heightens vulnerability to flash floods during intense winter rains, as evidenced by severe flooding in March 2024 that halted the local water supply project, damaged infrastructure worth 1.5 billion Iraqi dinars (about $1.1 million USD), and affected hundreds of homes and businesses. Regional droughts, exacerbated by climate variability, periodically strain water resources, with studies indicating declining precipitation trends in Zakho supporting evidence of warming impacts. [14] [15] Environmental pressures include deforestation along the Iraq-Turkey border near Zakho, driven by military activities, road construction, and cross-border operations, which have accelerated forest loss through spatiotemporal patterns analyzed via machine learning models. Air pollution from regional gas flaring and traffic, though not uniquely quantified for Zakho, contributes to broader degradation in the Kurdistan Region, compounded by wartime and developmental factors. [16] [17]

Topography and Hydrology

![Delal Bridge over the Little Khabur River in Zakho](./assets/Delal_Bridge_in_Zakho_(201) Zakho is situated in the northwestern foothills of the Zagros Mountains, where the rugged terrain transitions into broader plains characteristic of the region's geomorphology. The landscape features anticlinal ridges and synclinal valleys, with elevations ranging from approximately 400 meters to over 1,100 meters above sea level. [18] [19] Average elevation in the Zakho area is around 661 meters. [20] These valleys and riverine corridors have historically facilitated human settlements by providing natural pathways and fertile lowlands amid the hilly topography. [19] The primary hydrological feature is the Little Khabur River (also known locally as the Zakho River or Feesh Khabur), which originates in Turkey and flows through Zakho before joining the Tigris River downstream. [21] [22] This transboundary tributary supports local water resources, with flow regimes influenced by seasonal precipitation and upstream contributions, entering Iraq near Zakho and contributing to the Tigris basin's overall hydrology. Geologically, the area lies near the Bitlis-Zagros thrust fault zone, exposing it to seismic risks, including potential earthquakes up to moment magnitude 7.5, though no major recent events have destabilized the core topography. [23] Fault reactivation in basement structures underscores the need for hazard assessments, but the terrain's stability relative to more active zones has allowed persistent valley formations. [24]

History

Ancient and Medieval Periods

![Delal Bridge in Zakho](./assets/Delal_Bridge_in_Zakho_(201 ) Archaeological evidence for early human settlement in the Zakho region points to prehistoric activity influenced by broader Mesopotamian cultures, though direct findings at the modern city's site remain limited. Nearby mounds in Iraqi Kurdistan yield surface ceramics indicating occupation extending back approximately 6,000 years, suggesting possible continuity from Neolithic or Chalcolithic periods, but systematic excavations specific to Zakho have not confirmed such antiquity at its core location.[25] The area's position along the Khabur River, a tributary of the Tigris, aligns with early riverine settlement patterns in northern Mesopotamia, yet verifiable artifacts linking prehistoric communities directly to Zakho are scarce.[26] During the Assyrian Empire's dominance (c. 911–609 BCE), Zakho's territory fell within the provincial extent of northern Mesopotamia, but cuneiform records provide no explicit references to a settlement at this precise location. Sparse archaeological traces, such as potential hilltop remains, hint at continuity from Bronze Age influences, including Mitanni or Assyrian outposts, though these lack definitive ties to Zakho without further investigation. The absence of named mentions in Assyrian royal inscriptions or administrative texts underscores the settlement's minor role, if any, in imperial narratives focused on major centers like Nineveh or Assur.[27] In the medieval era, Zakho's historical presence becomes more discernible, with the earliest potential reference appearing as Beth-Zakhu ("house of victory") in an 11th-century Syriac manuscript, indicating early medieval recognition as a localized community.[28] The Delal Bridge over the Khabur River, a stone arch structure facilitating regional passage, is variously dated by scholars to the Abbasid Caliphate (750–1258 CE) or earlier Roman influences with later restorations, underscoring its role in medieval trade routes through Kurdish-inhabited highlands.[29] By the 13th–14th centuries, amid Ilkhanid Mongol administration, the area served as a peripheral trade post in Kurdistan's tribal domains, though primary Islamic geographical texts like those describing provincial boundaries offer indirect rather than nominative evidence for Zakho itself.[30] Limited ruins and textual allusions reflect modest development, prioritizing riverine connectivity over urban prominence.

Ottoman and Early Modern Era

Zakho came under Ottoman control in the early 16th century following the empire's expansion into southeastern Anatolia and northern Mesopotamia after Selim I's victory at the Battle of Chaldiran in 1514, integrating the region previously contested between Ottomans and Safavids.[31] The town formed part of the semi-autonomous Bahdinan Emirate, a Kurdish beylik that managed local affairs under nominal Ottoman suzerainty, with Zakho serving as a peripheral settlement in its domain centered around Amadiya and Dohuk.[32] Tanzimat reforms in the mid-19th century prompted centralization efforts, leading to the dissolution of the Bahdinan Emirate by 1843 and the elevation of Zakho to a sub-governorate (kaza) within the emerging administrative structure of the Mosul region around 1842.[32] [33] By the late 19th century, following the formal establishment of the Mosul Vilayet in 1867, Zakho functioned as a nahiya (sub-district) under the Amadiya or Dohuk sanjaks, where local Kurdish tribal leaders retained influence over governance and security amid ongoing Ottoman efforts to curb tribal autonomy.[34] Tribal dynamics remained volatile, with groups from surrounding areas like Dihok and Amadiya providing irregular forces for Ottoman levies while engaging in feuds that disrupted administrative control.[34] Economically, Zakho's position astride caravan routes linking Baghdad northward to Anatolia and beyond fostered bazaar expansion in the 19th century, serving as a trade hub for agricultural produce, livestock, and transit goods despite banditry from nomadic tribes.[32] Revenues from agriculture and local metallic resources supported its role as a regional exchange point, though Ottoman taxation and tribal exactions limited sustained growth.[32] World War I disrupted Ottoman administration in the region, with British forces advancing into northern Mesopotamia by 1918, occupying Zakho and imposing provisional military governance that introduced direct colonial oversight and suppressed residual tribal resistance.[35] This period marked a shift from Ottoman-sanctioned tribal intermediaries to British-aligned local elites, though skirmishes persisted as Kurds in the Zakho area navigated alliances amid the empire's collapse.[36]

20th Century Developments

Following the Ottoman Empire's defeat in World War I, Zakho came under British administration as part of the Mandate for Mesopotamia, established in 1920.[1] The city, previously a district within the Mosul Vilayet since 1864, was incorporated into the newly formed Kingdom of Iraq in 1921, with formal Iraqi independence recognized in 1932.[1] This integration aligned Zakho administratively under the Mosul district, subjecting its predominantly Kurdish population to centralized Arab-dominated governance amid ongoing tribal and autonomy tensions.[1] Throughout the 1930s and 1940s, Zakho experienced relative stability under the monarchy, but regional Kurdish unrest, including uprisings led by figures like Sheikh Mahmud Barzanji, indirectly disrupted local security through cross-border raids and refugee movements.[37] The 1943–1945 Barzani revolt, initiated by Mustafa Barzani against perceived marginalization, further highlighted autonomy demands in northern Iraq, though direct fighting spared Zakho initially.[38] By the 1950s, following the 1958 overthrow of the monarchy, Ba'athist influences began eroding Kurdish influence, setting the stage for escalated conflict. The 1961 outbreak of the First Iraqi–Kurdish War, launched by Mustafa Barzani's forces seeking autonomy, brought direct instability to Zakho's vicinity.[39] Peshmerga fighters attacked positions near Zakho and Dohuk in 1961–1962, prompting Iraqi counteroffensives that inflicted casualties on government forces estimated at around 50 in the area.[39] The war, lasting until a fragile 1970 autonomy agreement, involved intermittent clashes and cross-border pursuits, with Syrian troops briefly entering Zakho in pursuit of Barzani loyalists.[40] These events strained local resources and economy, as Zakho's border position facilitated arms smuggling and refugee flows. Under Saddam Hussein's Ba'athist regime from the 1970s onward, repression intensified, culminating in the Anfal campaign of 1986–1989, a systematic operation against Kurdish populations in northern Iraq, including the Badinan region encompassing Zakho.[41] Anfal involved village destructions, forced displacements of up to 100,000 Kurds, and chemical attacks—such as the March 1988 Halabja assault killing 5,000 nearby—aimed at eliminating peshmerga support bases.[41] [42] While Zakho itself avoided total destruction as an urban center, the campaign's fallout included mass internal displacements toward border towns like Zakho, exacerbating overcrowding and economic hardship.[43] The 1991 Gulf War aftermath triggered a Kurdish uprising against Iraqi forces, suppressed brutally and leading to over 1 million refugees fleeing toward Turkey and Iran.[44] In response, the U.S.-led Operation Provide Comfort established a safe haven in April 1991, initially a 36-square-mile zone centered on Zakho to protect returning Kurds from Iraqi reprisals.[45] Coalition forces airlifted supplies to refugee camps in the Zakho area, enabling the repatriation of hundreds of thousands and laying groundwork for de facto Kurdish self-rule, though the operation faced logistical challenges from terrain and Iraqi incursions. [44] The safe haven's enforcement via no-fly zones persisted beyond July 1991, stabilizing Zakho as a humanitarian hub.[46]

Post-2003 Autonomy and Conflicts

Following the 2003 U.S.-led invasion of Iraq and the subsequent collapse of the Ba'athist regime, Zakho transitioned to administration under the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), which expanded its de facto control over northern Iraq's Kurdish-majority areas, including Duhok Governorate where Zakho is located.[47] This shift diminished direct interference from the central Iraqi government in Baghdad, enabling localized governance and security arrangements that fostered initial stability compared to southern Iraq's sectarian violence.[48] The 2005 Iraqi Constitution further enshrined the KRG's federal autonomy, allocating powers over local resources and borders, which Zakho leveraged as a key northern trade conduit.[48] Between 2003 and 2005, Zakho experienced an economic upswing driven by cross-border commerce with Turkey through the nearby Ibrahim Khalil customs gate, which handled increased imports of consumer goods and exports amid Iraq's post-invasion reconstruction demands.[1] Oil-related activities in the broader KRG region, including pipeline access negotiations, indirectly boosted local trade logistics, though Zakho's gains stemmed primarily from its strategic border position rather than direct hydrocarbon extraction.[47] This period saw reduced insurgent threats in Kurdish areas, allowing population inflows from displaced Iraqis and returning Kurds, with urban expansion evident in new commercial districts and housing.[1] Studies indicate Zakho's population grew from approximately 87,000 in 1987 to over 120,000 by the early 2000s, accelerating post-2003 due to economic pull factors, though precise census data remains limited by Iraq's disrupted enumeration processes.[49] From 2005 to 2010, the KRG prioritized infrastructure in border districts like Zakho, funding road upgrades, water systems, and public facilities to support trade volumes that reportedly doubled regional GDP contributions in Duhok.[50] Minority protections were formalized through KRG quotas reserving parliamentary seats and local council positions for Assyrians, Yazidis, and Turkmen—groups prominent in Zakho—aiming to integrate them into governance amid historical marginalization under prior regimes.[51] However, emerging tensions arose from PKK militants using mountainous border zones near Zakho for infiltrations into Turkey, prompting Ankara's diplomatic pressure on the KRG and U.S.-facilitated intelligence sharing to curb cross-border movements, with Turkish forces reporting kills of several PKK fighters attempting entry in 2006.[52] These incidents highlighted vulnerabilities in KRG-Turkey relations, despite Erbil's public disavowal of the PKK, which operated semi-autonomously in remote Qandil areas.[47]

Recent Incidents (2010s–Present)

In 2014, as the Islamic State (ISIS) advanced through northern Iraq, Kurdish Peshmerga forces mounted defenses in Dohuk Governorate, including areas around Zakho, successfully preventing direct occupation of the district despite ISIS incursions nearby in Sinjar and other western Nineveh plains locations.[53][54] The offensive displaced over 400,000 Yazidis and others toward safer Kurdish-held territories like Dohuk, imposing strains on Zakho's infrastructure through refugee influxes that overwhelmed local housing and services until stabilization efforts by mid-2017.[54] The September 25, 2017, Kurdistan Region independence referendum, which passed with 92.73% approval in the region, intensified federal Iraqi-KRG disputes, resulting in Baghdad's imposition of flight bans, border closures, and budget withholding that disrupted governance and public sector payments in Zakho, exacerbating economic vulnerabilities without altering its administrative status under KRG control.[55] Turkish military operations against Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) militants along the Iraq-Turkey border have periodically affected Zakho District, with Ankara conducting drone, artillery, and ground incursions framed as counterterrorism measures. On July 20, 2022, four to five artillery shells or missiles struck the Barakh tourist resort near Zakho, killing nine civilians—including a five-year-old child and pregnant woman—and wounding 32 others, according to Iraqi and KRG officials; Turkey maintained the strikes targeted PKK positions, denying deliberate civilian harm.[56][57][58] Similar cross-border actions continued into 2025, including a July 29 ground operation in Batifa subdistrict of Zakho, though reported attack frequency declined amid regional diplomatic shifts.[59]

Demographics

Population Overview

The Zakho District in Duhok Governorate had a projected population of 360,282 in 2025, according to estimates from the Kurdistan Region Statistics Office using a cohort-component projection model based on 2020 baseline data.[60] Of this total, the urban population was estimated at 323,382, reflecting a high degree of concentration in the city of Zakho and surrounding urban areas, while the rural component stood at 36,899.[60] Population figures for the district have shown steady growth, increasing from an approximate baseline of 319,000 in 2020 to the 2025 projection, implying an average annual growth rate of around 2.4% under medium fertility and mortality assumptions.[60] This upward trend accelerated post-2003, driven by returns of displaced residents following improved regional stability, contrasting with lower pre-1991 estimates that placed the district population closer to 200,000 or below amid earlier conflicts and migrations.[61] Kurdistan Regional Government population data rely heavily on such projection models due to historical challenges in conducting comprehensive censuses, including security disruptions and incomplete vital registration; however, the 2024 national census provided preliminary confirmation of broader regional totals exceeding 6.37 million, supporting the validity of district-level extrapolations that incorporate net migration adjustments for outflows to urban centers or abroad.[60][62] Projections anticipate continued growth to 405,470 by 2030, tempered by assumed declining fertility and stable life expectancy.[60]

Ethnic Composition

Zakho's population is overwhelmingly ethnic Kurdish, forming the vast majority estimated at over 90 percent based on local and regional demographic patterns in Duhok Governorate, where Kurds predominate as the core ethnic group.[1][63] This composition reflects self-reported affiliations in surveys and reports from the Kurdistan Regional Government area, with Kurds primarily Sunni Muslims residing in urban and rural districts alike.[64] Minority groups include Assyrian Christians, encompassing Chaldean Catholics, Syriac Catholics, and other denominations such as Nestorians, who maintain small communities in Zakho and surrounding villages.[1][28] These groups, along with minor Armenian populations, represent longstanding Christian presences, though their numbers remain limited relative to the Kurdish majority.[1] Arabs and Turkmen constitute additional small minorities, often tied to trade or historical settlement in border zones.[64] A historical Jewish community of approximately 1,900 individuals resided in Zakho prior to their near-complete emigration to Israel in the early 1950s amid broader Iraqi Jewish exodus.[65] Post-2003, while some Assyrian families returned to northern Iraq including Zakho district following improved autonomy under the Kurdistan Regional Government, overall minority populations have faced emigration pressures due to persistent insecurity, including PKK-linked militant activities in proximate border regions that exacerbate vulnerabilities for non-Kurdish groups.[66][67] Self-reported data from humanitarian assessments underscore these minorities' reduced shares amid the city's growth to around 300,000-360,000 residents by recent estimates.[1]

Religious Demographics

The religious composition of Zakho is dominated by Sunni Muslims, who form the majority and are primarily Kurds.[1] A notable Christian minority persists, comprising Chaldean Catholics, Syriac Orthodox, and Syriac Catholics, alongside smaller numbers of Armenians.[1] These groups trace their presence to longstanding communities in the Dohuk region, though exact current proportions remain undocumented in official censuses, with estimates suggesting Christians constitute under 10% amid broader demographic shifts in Iraqi Kurdistan.[68] Christian populations in Zakho have declined sharply since the mid-20th century, from approximately 45% in the early 1960s to far lower figures by 2018, driven by emigration, targeted violence including 1930s pogroms against Assyrians, and later displacements from conflicts.[69] The 2014 ISIS offensive exacerbated this trend across northern Iraq, though Zakho itself saw limited direct occupation; ISIS's ideology posed existential threats to non-Muslims, prompting further outflows of Christians and smaller ethno-religious groups like Yazidis, who maintain a minor presence in the Zakho district alongside their larger concentrations elsewhere in Dohuk province.[70][71] Under the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), which pursues relatively secular governance compared to central Iraq, there have been initiatives to reconstruct churches and support minority religious sites in Zakho, aiming to stabilize communities amid ongoing security challenges from cross-border militancy and residual Islamist extremism.[1] Intergroup dynamics remain tense, with non-Muslim minorities citing periodic harassment or ideological pressures from hardline Sunni elements, contrasting KRG efforts to promote coexistence through administrative protections.[70]

Migration and Displacements

In the aftermath of the 1991 Iraqi uprisings against Saddam Hussein's regime, Zakho hosted a U.S.-led refugee camp under Operation Provide Comfort, sheltering approximately 4,000 Kurdish refugees who had fled repression in northern Iraq.[72] [73] These displacements stemmed from Iraqi forces' counteroffensives following the Gulf War, driving hundreds of thousands of Kurds toward the Turkish and Iranian borders before international intervention facilitated camp establishment and eventual returns or resettlements by late 1991.[44] The rise of ISIS in 2014 triggered further internal displacements in Zakho and the broader Duhok governorate, with the Kurdistan Region absorbing over 1.4 million IDPs by 2016, many fleeing Nineveh and Sinjar provinces.[74] Local camps and host communities in Zakho district accommodated thousands temporarily, though exact figures for the area remain underreported amid the regional crisis that displaced 3.2 million Iraqis overall by 2017. Returns accelerated post-ISIS territorial defeat in 2017, with over 80% of IDPs repatriating nationwide by 2023, but Zakho saw sustained challenges from damaged infrastructure and security fears. Cross-border operations in the 2020s by Turkish forces targeting PKK positions have prompted repeated village evacuations in Zakho's border hamlets, including the near-total abandonment of Christian-majority areas. In July 2020, nine of eleven Christian villages in the district were evacuated due to airstrikes, displacing hundreds and emptying sites like Sharaf and other Syriac settlements.[75] [76] Iranian shelling against similar groups has compounded these effects, with joint Turkish-Iranian actions from 2015–2017 and beyond forcing temporary displacements of entire communities, often lasting weeks to months, and contributing to environmental degradation that hinders repopulation.[77] By 2024, over 600 villages in Duhok province, including those near Zakho, reported evacuations tied to such operations.[78] Return efforts face obstacles, particularly for Assyrian minorities, where property disputes involving alleged land grabs by local authorities or settlers have stalled repopulation. Reports document over 70 Assyrian villages and towns in northern Iraq, including Zakho-area sites, affected by expropriations since the 1990s, with returnees encountering bureaucratic hurdles and adverse possession claims.[79] [80] Human Rights Watch noted in 2004 that thousands of displaced Assyrians in the region struggled against Kurdish-majority claims to ancestral lands, a pattern persisting despite legal frameworks for restitution, leading to emigration rather than return for many.[80] These issues reflect broader causal factors like weak enforcement of property rights amid ethnic tensions, reducing sustainable repatriation rates below 50% in minority enclaves.[81]

Economy

Border Trade and Commerce

Zakho functions as a vital gateway for cross-border trade between the Kurdistan Region of Iraq (KRG) and Turkey, primarily through the Ibrahim Khalil (also known as Habur) border crossing located approximately 10 kilometers north of the city. This crossing facilitates the bulk of bilateral commerce, with the vast majority of Turkey-Iraq trade—estimated at $17 billion annually—transiting via this route, including consumer goods, construction materials, and machinery imported from Turkey. In 2024, Turkish exports to Iraq reached $13.034 billion, reflecting a 4.38% increase from the previous year, underscoring the crossing's economic significance to Zakho's local economy. Iraqi exports through the gate include agricultural products such as dates, vegetables, and fruits, alongside oil shipments that resumed in September 2025 after a two-and-a-half-year halt.[82][83][84][85] The influx of Turkish imports has historically supported Zakho's bazaars, which serve as distribution hubs for textiles, household items, and other merchandise entering Iraq. Fuel smuggling, including illicit oil trade networks leveraging cross-border ties, has also occurred through regional routes near the border, though official trade data focuses on declared volumes. Annual trade between the KRG and Turkey exceeds $5 billion, with monthly exchanges surpassing $1 billion, bolstering Zakho's role as a commercial node post-2003 KRG stability.[86][87][88] Disruptions at Ibrahim Khalil, such as temporary closures or regulatory halts, have periodically slashed trade volumes in Zakho; for instance, traffic dropped by 70% in early 2023 due to operational issues, and a 60% decline was recorded in 2016 amid regional tensions. These events strand thousands of trucks and reduce local commerce, as seen in November 2024 when a Turkish system upgrade halted crossings for two days. Despite such volatility, the crossing's revenue generation—via customs and fees—remains central to the KRG economy, with Zakho benefiting from its proximity as a processing and retail center.[89][90][91] ![Delal Bridge in Zakho](./assets/Delal_Bridge_in_Zakho_(201)

Agriculture and Local Industries

The agriculture sector in Zakho relies on the fertile valley of the Zakho River (also known as the Hizel River), which supports cultivation of staple crops such as wheat and barley, alongside vegetables like eggplants, peppers, and cucumbers grown in plastic greenhouses, as well as fruit orchards.[92][93] Livestock rearing, particularly cattle, sheep, and goats, plays a significant role, with local farmers in surrounding villages maintaining herds totaling thousands of animals and producing high-demand dairy products like milk and cheese.[94] However, irrigation-dependent farming faces acute challenges from water scarcity, as upstream dams in Turkey have significantly reduced river flow, drying up sections of the Zakho River and limiting access to water for farmers since at least 2022.[95] Local industries remain small-scale and underdeveloped, encompassing activities such as textile weaving—particularly Kurdish wool and carpet production integrated into regional value chains—and manufacturing of construction materials like lightweight aluminum.[96][97] Emerging efforts include a recycling factory and an industrial area initiated by the Kurdistan Regional Government in November 2023, aimed at creating thousands of jobs through expanded manufacturing, though construction on a larger industrial complex was slated to begin shortly thereafter.[98][99] Post-ISIS reconstruction has incorporated development aid for agriculture, including a UAE-backed project announced in 2023 featuring an agricultural research center to enhance local farming resilience.[2] Unemployment in the broader Kurdistan Region, which impacts Zakho's non-trade sectors, stood at 16.5% in 2021 according to official data, with youth rates higher and persistent challenges from limited industrial diversification.[100] Broader critiques of corruption in Iraq's agricultural aid distribution have delayed similar projects regionally, though specific Zakho impacts remain underreported.[101]

Infrastructure and Development Challenges

Zakho's road infrastructure has benefited from Turkish-led projects, including the Gali Zakho Tunnel, a 3,600-meter structure completed in the mid-2010s at a cost of approximately $141 million, which facilitates safer transport along the Duhok-Zakho route toward the Turkish border at Ibrahim Khalil.[102] The Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) has also approved expansions, such as a Zakho-Ibrahim Khalil highway funded by 50 billion Iraqi dinars (about $41.6 million), aimed at linking the district to border trade hubs.[103] Despite these advancements, roads in the Duhok governorate, encompassing Zakho, often lack essential safety elements like proper lane markings, traffic signs, and lighting, exacerbating risks amid heavy commercial and passenger traffic.[104] Energy and utilities face persistent vulnerabilities, with electricity supply prone to disruptions from regional conflicts, including drone strikes by Iran-backed militias on nearby oil fields such as Tawke, Peshkabour, and DNO in the Zakho vicinity, which have curtailed production by up to 200,000 barrels per day since mid-2025.[105] Water access in the Semel and Zakho districts stands at 96.2% for improved sources, surpassing national averages, yet groundwater depletion linked to overuse poses long-term risks.[106] Systemic challenges are compounded by ongoing KRG-Baghdad budget disputes, where federal withholding of funds—ongoing since 2014 and intensified post-2022—has delayed salary payments for public workers, including those maintaining infrastructure, thereby stalling broader development initiatives.[107] Safety lapses in household energy use underscore regulatory gaps, as evidenced by a March 2025 gas cylinder leak in Zakho's Hasan Awa neighborhood that ignited a house fire, reflecting wider issues with liquefied petroleum gas (LPG) handling in the Kurdistan Region where similar explosions have caused multiple fatalities in residential areas.[108] These incidents, often tied to inadequate storage and refilling standards, highlight vulnerabilities in domestic infrastructure amid economic pressures that limit enforcement and upgrades.[109]

Government and Security

Administrative Structure

Zakho operates as a district within the Dohuk Governorate of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), with the city functioning as its administrative center and encompassing sub-districts such as Darkar, Batifa, and Rizgari, along with approximately 187 villages.[110] In September 2021, KRG Prime Minister Masrour Barzani inaugurated Zakho as an independent administration, enhancing its local autonomy in managing regional affairs near the Iraqi-Turkish border.[111] Local governance is led by a district administrator appointed under KRG protocols, alongside a municipal council and mayor responsible for urban services, where the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) maintains predominant influence owing to its control over most seats in Dohuk provincial elections.[112] This structure reflects the KDP's broader hegemony in Dohuk's political landscape, shaping appointments and policy priorities at the district level.[113] Following the 2003 overthrow of Saddam Hussein, the KRG implemented devolution of key services—including education, healthcare, and municipal infrastructure—to districts like Zakho, fostering localized decision-making within the autonomous framework outlined in the KRG's post-2003 administrative laws. However, overlaps with Iraq's federal government persist, notably in revenue-sharing disputes over oil and gas fields adjacent to Zakho, where Baghdad retains claims despite KRG operational control.[114] Administrative practices have drawn scrutiny for restricting press freedoms, as evidenced by the August 2023 arrest of journalist Islam Kashani by Zakho's Asayish forces, who accused him of ties to the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK); Kashani, a host on Xabir TV, was detained amid broader patterns of media detentions under KRG oversight.[115][116] Such actions underscore tensions between local governance and independent reporting in the district.[117]

Cross-Border Conflicts and Security Operations

The Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), designated a foreign terrorist organization by the United States since 1997 and by the European Union, operates bases in the border mountains near Zakho in Iraq's Dohuk province, justifying Turkish cross-border operations aimed at neutralizing these threats to prevent attacks on Turkish territory.[118][119] Turkey has maintained military positions in northern Iraq since the 1990s, escalating with ground incursions like Operation Claw-Lock launched in 2022 to dismantle PKK infrastructure and leadership in the region.[120] In June 2024, PKK fighters targeted a Turkish military base in Zakho with Milan anti-tank missiles, highlighting the group's active use of the area for offensive actions against Turkish forces.[121] Iran similarly conducts artillery and aerial strikes against the Party of Free Life of Kurdistan (PJAK), a PKK offshoot deemed separatist militants by Tehran, with incursions into Iraqi Kurdistan to target training camps and fighters near the border.[122] These operations, such as cross-border raids reported in 2011, seek to suppress PJAK attacks on Iranian security personnel, though they have extended into areas proximate to Zakho's border zone.[122] Since 1991, Turkish and Iranian military actions in Iraqi Kurdistan have resulted in at least 425 civilian deaths and 420 injuries among non-combatants, according to monitoring by human rights observers, underscoring the collateral risks of pursuing embedded militants.[123] The Kurdistan Regional Government's (KRG) Peshmerga forces and Asayish security apparatus counter PKK activities in Dohuk, including responses to drone strikes and ambushes claimed by the group in April-May 2025 on Peshmerga positions near Zakho.[124][125] Turkey accuses the KRG of insufficient action against PKK harboring, while the Iraqi federal government has lodged complaints against the KRG for sovereignty lapses enabling militant entrenchment, as evidenced by repeated border violations and failure to evict groups despite demands.[126] Iraq's central authorities have also protested Turkish strikes, such as the July 2022 artillery barrage in Zakho district that killed nine civilians, as infringements on national territory, though these operations are framed by Ankara as necessary to avert PKK-initiated violence against Turkish civilians and infrastructure.[57][127]

Civilian Impacts and Responses

On July 20, 2022, Turkish artillery shelling targeted a tourist resort in Parakhe village near Zakho, killing nine Iraqi civilians—including three men, three women, and two children—and injuring 23 others, according to local health officials and eyewitness accounts.[57] The attack disrupted summer tourism, a key local economic activity, as hundreds of visitors frequented the area for its scenic border location, leading to immediate halts in resort operations and broader deterrence of visitors amid fears of further strikes.[128] The incident prompted evacuations of nearby villages in Zakho and adjacent Amedi districts, with residents fleeing Turkish airstrikes and shelling that targeted PKK positions but affected civilian areas, resulting in the displacement of populations from at least eight villages in the immediate aftermath.[129] [130] Agricultural activities suffered as fields and homes were damaged or burned, exacerbating economic strain on farming communities dependent on cross-border trade and seasonal crops.[75] The Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) issued strong condemnations of the shelling, describing it as a violation of Iraqi sovereignty and calling for accountability, while local protests erupted in Zakho and Duhok demanding an end to cross-border operations.[131] [132] Despite public outrage, KRG maintained pragmatic economic ties with Turkey, prioritizing border commerce over escalation, as evidenced by continued trade flows post-incident. Internationally, UNHCR provided aid to internally displaced persons (IDPs) in Dohuk Governorate, including Zakho, where over 281,000 IDPs resided by late 2024, with support focused on camp-based families affected by ongoing conflicts.[133] [134] Long-term effects included infrastructure damage to resorts, cemeteries, and civilian sites, contributing to sustained displacement of villagers and psychological strain from repeated exposures to artillery fire, though specific trauma data remains limited in official reports.[135] U.S. State Department assessments noted the shelling's civilian toll as part of broader patterns of cross-border operations impacting non-combatants, with calls for restraint to mitigate humanitarian fallout.

Culture and Landmarks

Historical Sites and Architecture

The Delal Bridge, also known as Pira Delal or the Zakho Bridge, is a prominent stone arch structure spanning the Little Khabur River in Zakho, exemplifying enduring engineering from antiquity. Originating potentially in the Roman era with the extant form attributed to Abbasid or later reconstructions, the bridge features multiple robust arches designed to accommodate trade route traffic across the waterway.[136] [3] Its approximate 114-meter length and masonry construction have facilitated centuries of regional connectivity, underscoring adaptive architectural resilience against floods and seismic activity.[137] Remains of the Zakho Citadel, a fortified structure tied to historical defense along caravan paths, persist as ruins amid the urban landscape, reflecting Ottoman-period military architecture with stone walls and strategic positioning. These remnants, though partially eroded, highlight the site's role in safeguarding trade corridors extending from Mesopotamia toward Anatolia. Limited archaeological surveys have documented these features, emphasizing their integration into the city's topographic defenses.[138] Preservation initiatives by the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) incorporate UAV-based documentation of Zakho's historic core, including the bridge and citadel ruins, to assess structural integrity post-conflict damage from events like the 2014-2017 ISIS incursions and subsequent operations. Urban renewal projects, such as the Zakho corniche development completed around 2025, have restored access and stabilized these sites, integrating them into pedestrian-friendly zones while prohibiting heavy use to mitigate further deterioration.[139] [140] [141]

Religious and Cultural Heritage

Zakho maintains a rich tapestry of religious sites reflecting its minority Christian communities, particularly Chaldean and Syriac Catholics. The Mar Gorgis Cathedral, located in the Nasara district, serves as a central Chaldean Catholic place of worship, while the Mariam al Adra Church in the Abassia district caters to Syriac Catholics, both underscoring the enduring Assyrian presence in the border region.[142][69] In 2023, construction advanced on the Armenian Orthodox Church of Saint Mary the Virgin, featuring a distinctive four-dome design, supported by local authorities and community efforts to revive Orthodox traditions amid demographic shifts.[143] Historically, Zakho hosted a significant Jewish community of approximately 350 families, totaling around 1,900 individuals, before their mass exodus to Israel in the early 1950s following Iraq's broader expulsion policies.[28] This community maintained two main synagogues—Knishta Rabtha (the large synagogue) and Knishta Zurta (the little synagogue)—along with the 16th-century Yaakov Synagogue, which reinforced Zakho's role as a spiritual hub in Kurdish Jewish oral traditions and Neo-Aramaic practices.[65][144] These sites, now largely in ruins with remnants like synagogue walls on the verge of collapse as of 2017, highlight the pre-emigration multiculturalism shaped by geographic isolation and ancient Aramaic customs.[145] Kurdish cultural heritage in Zakho emphasizes festivals and crafts influenced by cross-border exchanges. The annual Shal u Shepk Festival, held since at least 2024, celebrates traditional Kurdish attire through exhibitions, live displays, and sales of regional fabrics from Kurdistan and neighboring Kurdish areas in Turkey, Syria, and Iran, fostering cultural continuity.[146][147] Local Christian families preserve textile traditions, weaving fabrics essential for Kurdish clothing, a practice rooted in generational skills that blend minority techniques with broader regional motifs.[148] Newroz, the Kurdish New Year, features communal music, dance, and feasts in spring, reinforcing ethnic identity amid historical migrations.[137] Post-ISIS recovery in northern Iraq has spotlighted pressures on secular and minority heritage, though Zakho's proximity to safer Kurdish-controlled areas mitigated direct ISIS occupation. Islamist influences have sporadically challenged non-Muslim sites, contributing to emigration and preservation efforts, yet local initiatives like church constructions signal resilience against erosion of diverse traditions.[149][150] This border multiculturalism, evident in oral histories and crafts, persists despite demographic declines, with KRG-backed events countering broader regional threats to cultural pluralism.[151]

Modern Attractions and Daily Life

Zakho's modern attractions center on its riverfront and urban parks, drawing visitors from neighboring Turkey and central Iraq. The Delal Bridge Park, situated along the Habur River, serves as a key leisure spot with scenic views and recreational facilities, enhanced by the historic Delal Bridge spanning the waterway.[152] In August 2025, local authorities announced plans for Iraq's largest fountain, a 40-meter structure incorporating music, lasers, and lights near the riverfront to stimulate tourism and economic activity.[153] Other draws include Shahidan Park and Aqarat Zewki, offering green spaces amid the city's post-2003 urban renewal, while the old bazaar remains a vibrant market for local goods and social interaction.[152][26] Daily life in Zakho reflects a blend of traditional Kurdish social norms and contemporary influences, with teahouses and cafes functioning as primary community gathering points for conversation and relaxation. The city's approximately 90,000 residents engage in commerce-heavy routines, supported by the University of Zakho, which provides higher education in fields like engineering, sciences, and humanities, contributing to moderate literacy and skill levels in the region.[137][26][154] Family structures emphasize extended kinship ties with lingering tribal elements, fostering hospitality and communal support, though urbanization has introduced cafe culture and youth-oriented activities.[155] Relative safety compared to Baghdad—owing to Kurdistan Regional Government stability—has enabled this vibrancy since 2003, with fewer insurgent threats allowing open markets and parks.[156] Challenges persist, including significant youth emigration driven by limited opportunities, with around 6,000 Kurds, many young, leaving for Europe in the first nine months of 2025 alone, exacerbating demographic pressures in border areas like Zakho. Perceptions of corruption within KRG institutions, though lower than in federal Iraq, undermine trust and development, as noted in regional analyses scoring the area moderately on global indices.[157][158] These factors contrast with the area's tourism growth but highlight ongoing hurdles to sustained prosperity.[159]

Society and Notable Figures

Sports and Community Activities

Zakho Sport Club (Zakho SC), founded in 1987, represents the city's primary professional football team and competes in the Iraq Stars League, the premier division of Iraqi football.[160] Known as the "Sons of Khabour" for the Khabur River flowing through Zakho, the club draws significant local support and has maintained competitive presence, finishing third in the 2024/25 season standings.[161] [162] The team conducts pre-season training camps, such as a five-day session in Erbil in August 2025 followed by a tour in Turkey, to prepare for league matches.[163] Zakho SC plays home games at Zakho International Stadium, a multi-purpose facility currently undergoing transformations to enhance capacity and infrastructure as of October 2025.[164] Community tournaments and matches organized by the club foster unity among residents, with the team's activities providing a platform for social engagement in the border region.[165] Beyond football, volleyball features prominently through venues like Mirani Volleyball Stadium, which hosts regional tournaments and matches, contributing to broader sports participation.[166] Traditional Kurdish sports, including choukhe wrestling and equestrian games such as cirit—involving javelin throwing from horseback—are practiced during local festivals and events in Zakho, preserving cultural practices amid modern athletic development.[167] These activities, supported by post-2003 regional investments in sports facilities, engage youth and promote physical fitness in line with Kurdish heritage.[161]

Notable Individuals

Louis Raphaël I Sako (born 4 July 1948 in Zakho) serves as the Chaldean Catholic Patriarch of Babylon, a position he has held since 2013.[168] Ordained a priest in Mosul in 1974 after studying there and in Baghdad, he was appointed bishop of the Chaldean Diocese of Zaku (encompassing Zakho) in 2002, where he focused on pastoral care for local Christians before his elevation to patriarch.[168] Sako has been vocal on interfaith dialogue and the protection of minorities in Iraq, particularly following ISIS attacks on Christian communities.[169] Yona Sabar (born 1938 in Zakho) is a linguist and scholar specializing in Neo-Aramaic languages spoken by Kurdish Jews.[170] He earned a PhD from Yale University in 1970 and became professor emeritus of Hebrew at UCLA, authoring works on Jewish dialects from Zakho and surrounding areas, preserving oral traditions from his native region.[170] His research documents the Aramaic heritage of Iraqi Jewish communities, including folklore and liturgy, based on fieldwork among emigrants.[171] Erdewan Zaxoyî (1 July 1957 – January 1986) was a Kurdish singer, songwriter, and composer from Zakho known for patriotic and folk-inspired music.[172] Active in the 1970s and early 1980s, he composed songs celebrating Kurdish identity and landscapes, such as those referencing Zakho and Kurdistan, which gained popularity despite political repression under the Ba'athist regime.[172] Zaxoyî's career was cut short by his execution in 1986, but his recordings remain influential in Kurdish cultural circles.[173] Azad Najar, a surgeon originally from Zakho, developed the Realheart Total Artificial Heart, a pump mimicking natural cardiac function with dual atria and ventricles.[174] Based in Sweden since the 1990s, he began prototyping in the early 2000s, achieving successful animal tests by 2019 and U.S. FDA approval for human trials in 2025, with initial implants planned for 2026.[175][176] His invention addresses limitations in prior ventricular assist devices, aiming to support patients awaiting transplants.[177]

References

User Avatar
No comments yet.