The Director of the Health Surveillance Department in Kirkuk told Kurdsat English that after the Iraqi Ministry of Health removed Kurdish writing on health licenses in Kirkuk province, and only Arabic was available on them," the decision was overturned after public outcry and pressure from the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK).

KurdSat reporter in Kirkuk Omar Ghareeb noted that the Iraqi Health Ministry did not explain why it had removed Kurdish from medical licenses, and the head of the Kirkuk health department, who is a Turkmen, abided by the ministry's decree.

The reporter said that the decision to restore Kurdish would be effective today. The decision of the Ministry of Health states that both Arabic and Kurdish must be written per the Iraqi constitution and the law on official languages in Iraq.

General Board for Kurdistani Areas Outside the Region, a department dedicated to monitoring Kurds in the disputed territories, released a statement on the issue and said, "After the removal of the Kurdish language from the Kirkuk Health Directorate, we as the General Board of Kurdish Areas Outside the Kurdistan Regional Government immediately informed all Kurdish factions in Baghdad and all parties involved in this unconstitutional act." The board took the matter to Iraqi courts and demanded an explanation.

"Fortunately, after the efforts of the Kurdish factions and the new Iraqi government, the Ministry of Health decided to restore the Kurdish language to official documents," the board added. The board also noted that the decision is a way to settle the remaining issues between the central government and the government in Erbil. 

"We hope the joint struggle of all our factions in Baghdad will achieve the last terms of al-Sudani's [government] agenda." The PUK participated in the al-Sudani government by placing some terms for implementing its government agenda, guaranteeing the constitutional rights of the Kurdish people in the disputed territories.

The Kurds lost control of the disputed territories and later some of their rights to their language, property, and freedom following the 2017 independence referendum in which the Iraqi militia attacked Kirkuk.