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Iraqi Turkmen Front
View on WikipediaThe Iraqi Turkmen Front[a] (abbreviated as ITF) is a political movement representing the Iraqi Turkmen people. It was founded on April 5, 1995 as a coalition of several Turkmen parties operating within the framework of Iraq's unity. The party aims for the Turkmen community to have greater political involvement, increased recognition and more rights.[1]
Key Information
Since the fall of Saddam Hussein, the party has contested control of Kirkuk and other areas of northern Iraq, claiming that Kirkuk belongs to the Turkmen people.[2][3] The ITF claims a region named Turkmeneli (literally meaning the "land of the Turkmens"[4]) as the homeland of the Iraqi Turkmen. Turkmeneli includes within its boundaries Kirkuk, Tal Afar, Erbil, Mandali, Mosul and Tuz Khurmatu.[5][4] The Iraqi Army and Peshmerga have not allowed them to form their militia and take control of the areas where they live.[6]
The party played an active role in the fight against the Islamic State to defend the region of Turkmeneli (especially around Kirkuk) and the Iraqi Turkmen population from the genocide that ISIS committed against Iraqi Turkmen.[7]
Composition
[edit]The Iraqi Turkmen Front is a coalition of the following political parties:
- Iraqi National Turkmen Party (INTP), founded in 1988 and which operated in the northern Iraqi no-fly zones
- Turkmeneli Party, founded in 1992 in Northern Cyprus as the Turkmen Union Party
- Provincial Turkmen Party
- Movement of the Independent Turkmen
- Iraqi Turkmen Rights Party
- Turkmen Islamic Movement of Iraq
Election results
[edit]In the December 2005 Iraqi legislative election, the ITF list (#630) polled 76,434 votes, or 0.7% nationwide, according to the uncertified published results. The overwhelming majority of those votes were cast in Kirkuk Governorate, where the ITF won more than 10% of the total. Most of the rest of the ITF's votes were in Saladin Governorate. According to the full official results of that election, the ITF is entitled to only one seat in the permanent National Assembly. The party has been funded deeply by the Turkish administration and military.[2]
In the aftermath of the first Iraqi parliamentary election in 2005, the ITF lodged a number of formal complaints to the Independent Electoral Commission of Iraq alleging vote fraud on the part of the Kurdish parties and protesting the Commission's decision to allow Kurdish internally displaced persons and refugees to vote in the places from which they had been expelled under Saddam Hussein. In the election, they received 93,480 votes, or 1.11% of votes cast, earning them three seats in the transitional National Assembly of Iraq.[1]
In the 2009 Kurdistan Region parliamentary election, many Turkmen boycotted the elections. The ITF polled just 7,077 votes, or 0.38% of the popular vote, winning 1 seat.
In the 2010 Iraqi national elections, the ITF has entered into an alliance with the Iraqi National Movement (Iraqiya) in the Governorate of Kirkuk. Iyad Allawi's Iraqiya List which the ITF candidates have taken part in, has won the elections in the governorate over the list of Patriotic Union of Kurdistan in total votes. The ITF candidate in the Turkmen stronghold of Kirkuk, Arshad Salihi, won 59,732 votes all by himself. This was second only to Khalid Shwani of the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan, who won 68,522 votes.
The other candidates of ITF who have entered the parliament from ITF lists and different lists were as following, Arshad Salihi (Kirkuk), Jale Çiftçi (Kirkuk), İzzettin Devle (Mosul) who was appointed as the Minister of Agriculture, Nebil Harbo (Mosul), Müdrike Ahmet (Mosul) and Hasan Özmen (Diyala) and 4 more including Turhan Müftü who was appointed as the Minister of the Governorates. The ITF has won a total of 127,989 votes in general in Iraq, increasing their total vote cast by 34,600.[8]
ITF has decided to enter the latest Kurdish Elections which took place in late 2013, too. ITF has made up one list and got the highest vote in Erbil making Aydın Maruf the ITF Turkmen member of parliament from Erbil in KRG Parliament.[9]
In the Iraqi parliamentary election in 2014, the ITF has protected its total parliament member count of 10 and protecting the number of their directly elected number of candidates from ITF-Turkmen lists (without alliances) but also increasing the total number of ITF parliamenters to 3,[10] as a result of the victory of the ITF member who participated in Muttahidun Lil'Islah List, Hena Asğar, in Tuz Khurmatu, a major Turkmen settlement located in the Tooz District of Governorate of Saladin.[11] ITF tried hard to make all Turkmens cast their votes but they couldn't change the situation a lot, when compared to the previous elections and the ISIL advance in Iraq was shown as the main reason for this.[10] The movement's leader Arahad Salihi (Kirkuk) and deputy Hasan Turan (Kirkuk) has been elected as members of parliament from ITF's own list; Kirkuk Turkmen Front List, headed by party's deputy Hasan Turan.[12] ITF's, Kirkuk Turkmen Front List was the second in the Governorate of Kirkuk, winning 71,492 votes, nearly 13% of the total votes in Kirkuk Governorate. Although there was a second Turkmen list named Kirkuk Turkmen Alliance, participating in elections in Kirkuk;[12] the votes of ITF in Kirkuk have increased about 3,000 when compared to the received votes of ITF candidates in the 2010 elections.[8] The total vote received by Turkmen lists, nevertheless it was almost fully received by the ITF's Turkmen List, have increased too.[8] There were 7 other non-ITF Turkmen candidates who were elected to the parliament from various lists. The biggest surprise was the 3 Turkmens getting elected in Saladin Governorate, including the first ITF parliament member of Tuz Khurmatu, from a non-ITF list, Hena Asğar.[10][11]
Training by the Turkish Special Forces Command
[edit]In March 2015, exiled governor of Mosul, Atheel al-Nujaifi, revealed that Turkish Special Forces known as the "Maroon Berets" are training both Iraqi and Syrian Turkmens in a training mission targeted at recapturing ISIL's Mosul stronghold. Nujaifi also said that Turkish authorities had promised to send weapons. Turkish officials later confirmed training camps in Erbil, Mosul and Kirkuk as well as at unrevealed locations inside Syria. They said the training focussed on street clashes, sabotage and intelligence gathering.[13]
On the same day, Iraqi Turkmen Front MP Aydın Maruf declared that an official Turkmen Brigade of the Iraqi army would be created in the near future, starting with 500 men and then growing up to 1500 shortly thereafter for the defense of Tal Afar, Kifri and other major Turkmen settlements from ISIL and also for the planned offense to retake the areas which were under ISIL control, like Mosul.[14] He also stated that the brigade from now on would receive official support by the Turkish Armed Forces and that an Iraqi Turkmen commander would be in charge of the brigade in the ongoing fight. This official agreement between ITF, the Iraqi Government and the KRG will be guaranteed officially by the Republic of Turkey. Maruf considered this an important step for the future of Iraqi Turkmens. There are 4,000 Turkmen fighters battling Daesh in the northern province of Kirkuk and 10,000 others have finished their training in Mosul.[15]
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ The Iraqi Turkmen Front. Contemporain Co-éditions. Presses de l’Ifpo. 13 February 2013. pp. 313–328. ISBN 9782351592618.
{{cite book}}:|website=ignored (help) - ^ a b Raber Tal’at Jawhar (13 February 2013). The Iraqi Turkmen Front. Presses de l’Ifpo. ISBN 9782351592618. Retrieved February 26, 2012.
- ^ Ignatius, David (13 February 2015). "In Iraq, Kirkuk remains a question mark". The Washington Post.
- ^ a b Anderson & Stansfield 2009, 57.
- ^ Anderson & Stansfield 2009, 16.
- ^ "Iraq's Turkmen call for arms to join anti-ISIS war". Rudaw.
- ^ "Turkmens fight besides Iraqi army for Turkmen settlements". TRT Avaz. 13 March 2015. Archived from the original on 6 March 2016. Retrieved 16 March 2015.
- ^ a b c Duman, Bilgay (May 2012). "The Iraqi Turkmen Front in Its 17th Anniversary and the Turkmen in Iraqi Politics" (PDF). ORSAM-Middle Eastern Turkmen Programme (in Turkish). 4 (41). Turkish Center for Middle Eastern Strategical Studies(ORSAM): 58–60. Retrieved March 16, 2015.
- ^ Maruf, Aydın (July 7, 2014). "ORSAM Bölgesel Gelişmeler Söyleşileri - Kerkük'te Türkmen Varlığı Hiçe Sayılamaz(ORSAM Regional News Talk-The Significant Turkmen Population of Kirkuk Can Not Be Denied)" (PDF) (Interview). Interviewed by ORSAM. ORSAM-Turkish Center for Middle Eastern Strategical Studies. Retrieved March 16, 2015.
- ^ a b c Duman, Bilgay (June 2014). "Irak'ta 2014 Seçimleri, IŞİD Operasyonları, Irak'ın ve Türkmenlerin Geleceği (Iraqi parliamentary elections in 2014, ISIL Operations, Iraq's and Turkmens' Near Future)" (PDF). ORSAM-Middle Eastern Turkmen Programme (in Turkish) (190). Turkish Center for Middle Eastern Strategical Studies(ORSAM): 15 to 17. Retrieved March 16, 2015.
- ^ a b "HABER - 10 Türkmen Vekil Irak Meclisine Girdi (NEWS - 10 Turkmens Have Been Elected For the Iraqi Parliament) - at the most bottom point" (in Turkish). biyografi.net. May 21, 2014. Retrieved March 16, 2015.
- ^ a b "Iraq's parliament elections, 2014 - Kirkuk". Al Sumaria. May 20, 2014. Archived from the original on May 23, 2014. Retrieved March 16, 2015.
- ^ Uğur Ergan (16 March 2015). "Turkish military starts training missions in Iraq, Syria". Hürriyet Daily News. Retrieved 5 December 2015.
- ^ Aydın Albayrak (14 March 2015). "Iraqi Turkmens demand armed force of their own ahead of Mosul offensive against ISIL". Today's Zaman. Archived from the original on 30 May 2016. Retrieved 5 February 2016.
- ^ "Iraq: 4,000 Turkmens 'ready to combat Daesh'". Anadolu Agency. 19 March 2015. Retrieved 4 August 2016.
Works cited
[edit]- Anderson, Liam D.; Stansfield, Gareth R. V. (2009). Crisis in Kirkuk: The Ethnopolitics of Conflict and Compromise. University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 978-0-8122-4176-1.
Iraqi Turkmen Front
View on GrokipediaHistory
Formation in Post-Saddam Iraq
The Iraqi Turkmen Front (ITF), established on April 5, 1995, as a coalition of multiple Turkmen political parties and figures operating within Iraq's national framework, experienced a surge in operational relevance and organizational consolidation following the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq in March 2003 and the subsequent collapse of Saddam Hussein's Ba'athist regime.[11] This power vacuum dismantled the repressive centralized controls that had previously marginalized Turkmen political expression, enabling the ITF—drawing on antecedent cultural and advocacy bodies such as early Turkmen associations formed in the mid-20th century—to emerge as the consolidated political voice for Iraq's Turkmen minority, primarily concentrated in northern provinces like Kirkuk, Salah ad-Din, and Nineveh.[12] The invasion's aftermath, marked by the rapid advance of Kurdish Peshmerga forces into formerly Ba'athist-controlled mixed-ethnic areas, prompted the ITF to prioritize defensive mobilization against demographic shifts and territorial claims in Kirkuk, a city with a pre-2003 Turkmen plurality distorted by Saddam-era Arabization policies.[13] In the transitional period, the ITF's foundational motivations centered on safeguarding Turkmen communal interests amid ethnic reassertions, including opposition to unilateral Kurdish administration in disputed regions where Ba'athist structures had enforced artificial balances. Led by figures such as Sadettin Ergec, who assumed a pivotal role in steering the Front's post-invasion strategy, the organization focused on internal unification of disparate Turkmen factions and formal registration as a political entity eligible for participation in Iraq's emerging democratic processes.[14] This registration drive was essential for securing representation in bodies like the Iraqi Governing Council, established in July 2003, where Turkmen seats were contested amid broader efforts to normalize ethnic participation in governance. The ITF's early activities thus emphasized advocacy for equitable power-sharing in northern Iraq, leveraging ties to expatriate Turkmen networks and international observers to document and resist perceived expansions into historically Turkmen-inhabited zones.[15]Expansion and Key Milestones (2005–2014)
During the drafting of the 2005 Iraqi Constitution, the Iraqi Turkmen Front (ITF) advocated for explicit recognition of Turkmen rights, including language protections and mechanisms to address Saddam-era Arabization policies, such as forced displacements and demographic alterations in Kirkuk.[16] The resulting document acknowledged Turkmen in its preamble and Article 4, guaranteeing education in mother tongues like Turkmen, while Article 121 provided for local administrative units to manage non-Arabic official languages.[16][17] ITF representatives pushed for proportional quotas in disputed areas to reverse these policies, emphasizing fair property restitution amid competing claims from Kurds and Arabs, though tensions arose over perceived biases favoring Kurdish returns.[18] The ITF expanded politically through electoral participation, securing three seats in the January 2005 parliamentary elections with 93,480 votes (1.1% of the total).[19] It continued contesting subsequent polls, including alliances in the 2010 parliamentary elections, where it leveraged minority representation to maintain influence in coalitions amid Iraq's fragmented politics.[20] Paralleling these efforts, the ITF promoted the concept of a Turkmeneli Regional Administration to consolidate Turkmen-majority areas like Kirkuk, Saladin, and parts of Nineveh into an autonomous entity, advocating for international oversight to protect demographic integrity against encroachments.[11] By 2014, escalating sectarian violence culminated in the ISIS offensive, which targeted Turkmen communities in Mosul and Kirkuk peripheries, prompting ITF mobilization to defend these regions.[13] The group highlighted attacks on Turkmen sites as part of broader ethnic cleansing patterns, urging coordinated resistance while navigating alliances with Iraqi forces against the surge.[4] This period marked a shift toward security-focused advocacy, underscoring the ITF's role in safeguarding Turkmen interests amid rising instability.Post-ISIS Realignment (2015–Present)
Following the territorial defeat of ISIS in late 2017, the Iraqi Turkmen Front (ITF) shifted focus to consolidating influence in disputed territories like Kirkuk, advocating for governance structures that incorporated Turkmen representation amid power-sharing negotiations between Baghdad, Erbil, and local ethnic groups. Iraqi federal forces, supported by Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) units including Turkmen contingents, retook Kirkuk from Kurdish Peshmerga control on October 16, 2017, after the Kurdistan Region's independence referendum, enabling the ITF to press for the reversal of prior demographic manipulations through demands for a comprehensive census.[21][22] The ITF cited historical data, such as the 1957 census indicating Turkmen as the plurality in Kirkuk city (approximately 37% province-wide, with higher concentrations urbanely), to argue for verification of pre-Arabization majorities estimated at 30-50% in key areas, rejecting post-1970s alterations under Saddam Hussein's policies as invalid for current power allocation.[23] In parallel, the ITF pursued integration of Turkmen paramilitary elements—numbering in the low thousands within PMF brigades—into official Iraqi security structures to formalize their role in post-ISIS stabilization, while opposing the redeployment of Peshmerga forces to mixed areas, viewing it as a risk to ethnic balances. By 2018, Turkmen PMF regiments, initially mobilized against ISIS threats to Turkmeneli regions, were partially absorbed under the PMF's state-recognized framework, though tensions persisted over command loyalty amid Shia-dominated leadership in Baghdad.[13][24] This realignment emphasized resistance to unilateral Kurdish security returns, as articulated in joint statements with local Arab representatives denouncing Peshmerga incursions as destabilizing.[25] Pragmatically, the ITF cultivated alliances with Sunni Arab factions in northern Iraq to counterbalance Shia-centric influence from PMF headquarters and Baghdad's central government, prioritizing shared interests in disputed territories over sectarian divides. These coalitions manifested in coordinated advocacy against perceived overreach by Iran-backed militias and for equitable resource distribution, reflecting a strategic pivot from anti-ISIS mobilization toward multi-ethnic bargaining against federal dominance.[26] Such partnerships, evident in post-2017 Kirkuk dialogues, aimed to leverage Sunni-Turkmen demographics—collectively challenging Kurdish claims—for leverage in normalization processes under Iraq's constitution.[27]Ideology and Goals
Advocacy for Turkmen Ethnic Rights
The Iraqi Turkmen Front (ITF) centers its advocacy on securing ethnic self-determination for Iraq's Turkmen community, Iraq's third-largest ethnic group, by prioritizing verifiable demographic distributions in northern regions such as Kirkuk over contested territorial narratives. Formed in 1997 to consolidate Turkmen political efforts, the ITF demands safeguards against historical marginalization, drawing on empirical evidence of population shifts to argue for equitable representation and protection from assimilation.[4][28] Central to the ITF's platform is the reversal of Ba'athist Arabization campaigns conducted from the 1970s to 2003, which systematically deported non-Arab populations to alter ethnic compositions in oil-rich areas. These policies resulted in the expulsion of an estimated 120,000 Kurds, Turkomans, and Assyrians from Kirkuk and surrounding districts since 1991 alone, with Turkmans comprising a significant portion alongside targeted village destructions and forced resettlements.[29] The ITF calls for the repatriation of displaced Turkmans and the restoration of pre-Arabization demographics, rejecting post-2003 influxes perceived as manipulative reversals favoring Kurdish demographics.[18][30] The ITF promotes cultural preservation through demands for Turkish-language instruction and media outlets in Turkmen-concentrated locales, viewing these as essential to countering linguistic erosion. Prior to 2005, the ITF directly funded Turkmen-medium education in areas like Erbil to maintain linguistic heritage amid restricted state support.[31] This extends to broader protections for Turkmen traditions, including recent grassroots revivals of attire symbolizing identity resilience.[32] Rejecting irredentist independence movements, the ITF endorses federal mechanisms within a unified Iraq to enshrine Turkmen rights, opposing referendums that could cede disputed territories to regional autonomies without accounting for multi-ethnic realities. Leaders have criticized proposals subjecting Kirkuk's status to plebiscites as undermining demographic equity, favoring instead constitutional federal protections to prevent dominance by Arab or Kurdish majorities.[2][33] This stance aligns with calls for national citizenship principles that preserve ethnic diversity sans partition.[34]Positions on Federalism and Autonomy
The Iraqi Turkmen Front (ITF) supports a federal Iraq structured to ensure equitable power-sharing among ethnic groups, advocating for the establishment of Turkmeneli as a semi-autonomous region that would include Kirkuk, fringes of Mosul province, and Tal Afar, reflecting the concentrated Turkmen population in these areas.[2][17] This framework aims to secure administrative and cultural autonomy for Turkmens while maintaining Iraq's territorial unity, rejecting any secessionist precedents that could destabilize the state.[2] The ITF positions Turkmeneli as analogous to the Kurdistan Region in scope but distinct in preserving multi-ethnic governance, particularly in Kirkuk, to prevent dominance by any single group.[14] In opposition to Kurdish regional ambitions, the ITF has consistently rejected efforts to annex Kirkuk to the Kurdistan Regional Government, citing the incomplete normalization process mandated under Article 140 of the Iraqi Constitution, which required reversing demographic alterations from Saddam Hussein's Arabization policies and conducting a census prior to any referendum by mid-2007.[35][36] The failure to fully implement these steps—despite initial efforts between 2003 and 2005—has led the ITF to argue that rushed referenda, such as the aborted 2017 vote on Kirkuk's status, would entrench altered demographics favoring Kurds at the expense of Turkmens and Arabs.[35][2] ITF leaders have emphasized that true federal viability demands safeguards against such expansions, prioritizing normalization and equitable minority protections over plebiscites in disputed territories.[36] The ITF critiques Baghdad's governance as overly centralized under Shia-majority influence, which systematically sidelines Turkmen interests by undermining quota systems for minority parliamentary seats and ignoring calls for veto mechanisms to block decisions adverse to ethnic minorities.[2][37] This centralism, evident in repeated failures to enforce federal protections post-2003, exacerbates vulnerabilities for non-Arab groups like Turkmens, who number around 500,000–1 million in northern Iraq, by concentrating resource and administrative control without adequate minority input.[38] The ITF contends that robust federalism, including autonomous regions with shared veto powers, is essential for causal stability, as unchecked central authority perpetuates marginalization akin to pre-2003 eras.[2][4]Economic and Resource Claims in Turkmeneli
The Iraqi Turkmen Front asserts that Turkmen populations are entitled to a proportionate share of revenues from Kirkuk's oil fields, which account for roughly 10% of Iraq's national production, based on the demographic predominance of Turkmen in the region's urban centers prior to the 1970s.[39][40] The 1957 Iraqi census, the last conducted before systematic demographic alterations, documented Turkmen comprising 37% of Kirkuk city's population—establishing a plurality ahead of Kurds at 33% and Arabs at 22%—a distribution the ITF cites as justifying resource entitlements tied to historical residency rather than later influxes.[41][23] In advocating revenue-sharing arrangements for Turkmeneli, the ITF emphasizes formulas calibrated to verified ethnic compositions, contending that equitable allocation demands weighting indigenous group sizes over modifications from conflict-driven displacements or administrative reallocations post-2003.[42] This stance aligns with broader calls for component-based power distribution in Kirkuk, where the Front has proposed proportional administrative roles to mirror such demographics and safeguard resource flows.[43] To mitigate economic marginalization in Turkmen areas, the ITF promotes targeted development schemes, including infrastructure upgrades like enhanced border trade corridors and local connectivity projects, aimed at reversing decades of underinvestment and bolstering self-sustaining growth in regions such as Kirkuk and surrounding districts.[44] These initiatives seek to leverage Turkmeneli's strategic position for commerce while prioritizing investments that address infrastructural deficits attributable to prior neglect.[45]Organizational Structure
Leadership and Internal Composition
The Iraqi Turkmen Front (ITF) is led by Mohammad Semaan Kanani, who was unanimously elected as chairman on April 13, 2025, following the resignation of Hasan Turan earlier that day.[46] [47] Turan had served as leader from March 28, 2021, succeeding Arshad Salihi, who headed the organization from its early post-2003 formation through 2021.[48] [8] Leadership transitions, including Kanani's appointment by the ITF Political Bureau, have typically occurred through internal meetings convened in Kirkuk, reflecting the city's status as a core hub for Turkmen political decision-making, though broader coordination extends to Baghdad for national-level engagements.[8] The ITF's internal composition is predominantly Sunni Turkmen, drawn from urban centers such as Kirkuk and Tal Afar, where Turkmen communities form concentrated ethnic blocs amid Iraq's diverse demographics.[49] This Sunni-majority orientation aligns with the broader Iraqi Turkmen population, estimated at 10 percent of Iraq's total, though the ITF emphasizes unified ethnic representation over sectarian divisions that characterize some rival Turkmen groups.[13] The organization's structure includes a 71-member general assembly comprising the president, executive committee, Turkmen Women's Union, and Turkmen Students' Union, which facilitate targeted engagement with women and youth sectors of the community.[2] These bodies support internal cohesion without formal diaspora committees, focusing instead on domestic Turkmen interests in northern Iraq.[2]Affiliated Militias and Civil Society Arms
The Iraqi Turkmen Front (ITF) has supported the formation of small-scale self-defense units in Turkmen-populated regions since the post-2003 security vacuum, aimed at protecting communities from insurgent attacks and inter-ethnic violence. These groups function in a manner akin to peshmerga-style forces, prioritizing local defense over broader military engagements. In June 2014, ITF leader Arshad Salihi announced the mobilization of a new Turkmen militia in Kirkuk to address escalating Kurdish-Turkmen tensions and threats from Islamist militants.[50] Such affiliated security elements remain limited in size and scope, numbering in the hundreds rather than thousands, and operate defensively without integration into larger state-sanctioned structures like the Popular Mobilization Forces, from which ITF proposals for a unified Turkmen command were rejected. Salihi emphasized in 2014 that Turkmen communities were compelled to arm themselves due to inadequate protection from Iraqi security forces or Peshmerga.[51] These units have faced operational restrictions, including denials of formal recognition by the Iraqi army and Kurdish authorities. Unlike expansive Shia or Kurdish militias, ITF-linked groups focus narrowly on safeguarding Turkmen neighborhoods in Kirkuk, Tal Afar, and Tuz Khurmatu against localized threats. On the civil society front, the ITF maintains extensions through cultural and youth organizations that facilitate community resilience, including efforts to mobilize voters during elections and assist displaced Turkmen in returning to contested areas like Kirkuk. The Türkmeneli Student and Youth Union, operating in alignment with ITF priorities, has coordinated protests for municipal representation and cultural preservation in districts such as Altunköprü as of July 2025.[52] Similarly, the Iraqi Turkmen Human Rights Research Foundation, tied to Turkmen advocacy networks, documents ethnic rights abuses and supports refugee repatriation initiatives to reinforce demographic presence in Turkmeneli regions. These arms emphasize non-violent grassroots activities, distinct from political campaigning, to sustain cultural identity and counter assimilation pressures amid ongoing displacements.Electoral Performance
Participation in National Parliamentary Elections
The Iraqi Turkmen Front (ITF) has contested every national parliamentary election in Iraq since the inaugural post-Saddam Hussein's regime vote on January 30, 2005, primarily relying on the country's electoral system that allocates a minority quota to ensure representation for ethnic groups like the Turkmen. In that election, the ITF, running on list #630, received 93,480 votes—equivalent to 1.1% of the national total—and secured 3 seats in the 275-member Council of Representatives.[19][53] This outcome reflected the party's mobilization of Turkmen voters concentrated in northern provinces, though turnout challenges and security issues limited broader gains. Subsequent elections saw the ITF maintain its strategy of independent or coalition lists to capture seats under the quota framework, which reserves positions for minorities amid proportional representation. Alliances with Sunni Arab blocs occurred in cycles like 2010, aiming to amplify influence in a fragmented parliament where ethnic minorities often negotiate with larger sectarian groupings for policy leverage. By 2021, the ITF pushed for a unified Turkmen list across parties to consolidate votes from an electorate estimated at 500,000 to 1 million eligible Turkmen, participating in the October 10 poll amid calls for electoral reform.[54] The party has repeatedly critiqued the minority quota's implementation, arguing it enables manipulation by dominant parties through vote engineering and unequal access, undermining genuine ethnic representation. In the 2018 election on May 12, the ITF secured 3 seats, consistent with prior patterns but highlighting persistent underrepresentation relative to demographic claims. Voter turnout for Turkmen lists has hovered above 75,000 in competitive races, underscoring a dedicated base but vulnerability to regional displacements and rival ethnic mobilizations.| Election Year | Seats Won by ITF | Key Notes |
|---|---|---|
| 2005 (January) | 3 | Independent list; 93,480 votes (1.1%).[19] |
| 2018 | 3 | Minority quota contest; critiques of systemic biases raised post-poll.[37] |
Results in Provincial and Local Elections
The Iraqi Turkmen Front (ITF) achieved its strongest provincial performance in Kirkuk during the January 2005 elections, securing 8 seats in the 41-member provincial council amid a proportional representation system that allocated seats based on vote shares.[55] This result reflected early post-Saddam mobilization of Turkmen voters, though subsequent elections saw declines attributed to internal divisions, competing Turkmen lists, and occasional boycotts by the ITF over disputed voter registries and demographic changes in Kirkuk.[55] By the 2013 provincial polls, Turkmen fragmentation led to multiple parties splitting the vote, reducing unified ITF gains to minimal representation.[56] In the December 18, 2023, provincial elections, the ITF list received 75,166 votes in Kirkuk, translating to 2 seats in the reduced 16-member council, highlighting ongoing vote fragmentation among Turkmen groups that prevented broader seat allocation despite a combined ethnic turnout.[55][57] Official results from Iraq's Independent High Electoral Commission confirmed this outcome, with the ITF competing independently while other Turkmen entities fielded separate lists, contributing to a total of limited seats for the community relative to Kurdish (7 seats) and Arab (3-5 seats) blocs.[57]| Election Year | Kirkuk Council Size | ITF Seats | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2005 | 41 | 8 | Peak performance post-2003; proportional allocation.[55] |
| 2023 | 16 | 2 | Fragmented Turkmen vote; 75,166 votes secured.[55][57] |