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Iraqi Turkmen Front
Irak Türkmen Cephesi
الجبهة التركمانية العراقية

Flag of Iraq Turkmen Front.svg
Leader Sadettin Ergeç
Founded 1995
Ideology Turkmen minority politics,
Autonomous turkmeneli region
Official colours Blue
Website
http://www.kerkuk.net/
Politics of Iraq
Political parties
Elections

The Iraqi Turkmen Front (Turkish: Irak Türkmen Cephesi, Arabic: الجبهة التركمانية العراقي‎) is a political movement founded in 1995 which seeks to represent the Turkmen people of Iraq. Since the fall of Saddam Hussein in 2003, the ITF has contested control of Kirkuk and other areas of Turkmeneli. Although the ITF opposes Iraqi federalism on the grounds that it would give too much power to Iraqi Kurds, the former ITF president Faruk Abdullah Abdurrahman has expressed a desire for an eventual Turkmeneli state. In the meantime, the ITF seeks recognition for the Turkmen people as a national minority.

The ITF is a coalition of the following political parties:

In the Iraqi legislative election, December 2005, the ITF list (#630) polled 76,434 votes, or 0.7% nationwide, according to the uncertified published results.[1] The overwhelming majority of those votes were cast in Kirkuk Province, where the ITF won more than 10% of the total. Most of the rest of the ITF's votes were in Salah ad Din province. According to the full official results of that election, the ITF is entitled to only one seat in the permanent National Assembly.

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.[2] In the election, they received just over 90,000 votes, or 1.1% of votes cast, earning them three seats in the trasitional National Assembly of Iraq.

In early March 2005, the ITF agreed to join the Shia-led UIA's caucus in the National Assembly according to Zaman Online, after a disappointing result in which more Turkmens seem to have voted for the UIA or the Kurdish alliance than for the ITF.[3]

On April 28, 2007, ITF held a rally in Ankara against the Kirkuk referendum and demanding a special status for the city. [4] At the demonstration, banners that read "Vampires who drank the blood, cannibals who ate the flesh of Isa, take your hands off Iraq!" were present. [5]

On June 29 2007, Chairman Sadettin Ergeç told at a conference in New York City that their struggle aimed to save Kirkuk as the capital of Iraqi Turkmens or at least earn it a special status.[6]

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Parliamentary political parties in Iraq Iraq
National Iraqi Alliance
Islamic Supreme Council of Iraq - Sadrist Movement - Islamic Virtue Party - (Islamic Dawa Party - Iraq Organisation)

Dem. Pat. Alliance of Kurdistan
Kurdistan Democratic Party - Patriotic Union of Kurdistan - Kurdistan Toilers' Party - Kurdistan Communist Party-Iraq - Islamic Group Kurdistan - Iraqi Turkmen Brotherhood Party

Iraqi Accord Front
General Council for the People of Iraq - Iraqi Islamic Party - Iraqi National Dialogue Council

Iraqi National List
Iraqi Communist Party - Assembly of Independent Democrats - People's Union - Iraqi National Accord - The Iraqis

Others
Iraqi National Dialogue Front - Kurdistan Islamic Union - The Upholders of the Message - Reconciliation and Liberation Bloc - Iraqi Turkmen Front - Assyrian Democratic Movement - Chaldean Democratic Union Party - Yazidi Movement for Reform and Progress

Politics of Iraq