Terpene

Iraqis in Finland
Iraq Finland
Total population
33,995 (0.5%)
Regions with significant populations
Helsinki, Espoo, Turku, Vantaa, Tampere, Lahti
Languages
Finnish and Iraqi Arabic
also Kurdish (Sorani and Kurmanji dialects), Turkish (Iraqi Turkmen/Turkoman dialects), and Neo-Aramaic (Chaldean, Ashuri, and Mandaic)
Religion
Islam (Shia and Sunni)
Related ethnic groups
Swedish Iraqis, Iraqis in Denmark, Iraqis in Norway

Iraqis in Finland (Arabic: العراقيون في فنلندا, romanizedal-ʻIrāqīyūn fī Finlandā) are people with Iraqi background residing in Finland. As of 31 December 2023, they numbered 29,266, making them the second largest immigrant group in Finland after Estonians.[1]

Migration

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Most Iraqis in Finland have come as refugees. Of the 32,000 people who sought asylum in Finland in 2015, 21,000 were Iraqis, or two-thirds of all asylum seekers.[2]

Asylum based on clan feuds

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Iraq is a clan-based society like many in the Middle East. Many Iraqis claim asylum in Finland on the basis that they are threatened by rival clans in their home country, but the refugee conventions state that asylum is granted on the basis of being persecuted by authorities of a country. Persecution by other civilians is primarily a concern of police in the country of origin. This creates contradictions because officials in Iraqi police authorities might themselves be members of a rival clan.[3]

Mandaeans

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Mandaean community in Finland, May 2018

Finland has a community of Iraqi Mandaeans.[4]

Distribution

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Helsinki is home to the largest Iraqi community, but Turku has the highest proportion.

Iraqis by Municipality in 2018[5]
No. Municipality Iraqis %
1. Helsinki 5,936 0.92
2. Espoo 3,181 1.12
3. Turku 2,771 1.45
4. Vantaa 2,460 1.08
5. Tampere 1,642 0.70
6. Lahti 909 0.76
7. Oulu 681 0.33
8. Vaasa 382 0.57
9. Hämeenlinna 357 0.53
10. Jyväskylä 281 0.20

Notable Finnish people of Iraqi descent

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See also

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References

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