Turkmens censure exclusion from talks on disputed regions in Iraq
Peshmerga fighters assess the destruction caused by a reported Iranian rocket attack north of Kirkuk, in northern Iraq, on Nov. 23, 2022. (AFP Photo)


The Turkmen community of Iraq has criticized their exclusion from government meetings regarding Kirkuk and other disputed regions.

Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia al-Sudani on Tuesday attended a meeting in Baghdad to discuss a resolution of political and economic disputes between the central government and the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG). Turkmens were not invited to the meeting.

Article 140 of the Iraqi Constitution focuses on the status of the disputed regions in northern Iraq.

"Turkmens reject the (government) decisions regarding the status of the disputed regions, especially Kirkuk," read the joint statement issued by the Iraqi Turkmen Front (ITF) and other Turkmen political parties.

"The future, status and administration of Kirkuk, on which the Turkmens do not have a say, would be incomplete," the statement further read.

The joint statement underlined that the failure to include the Turkmen community in political alliances during the government formation talks was found "unacceptable" by the Turkmen parties.

Meanwhile, former ITF head Arshad Salihi termed the enforcement of Article 140 of the Constitution as a "blow to national partnership in Iraq."

"The fact that Kirkuk and its national identity are on Türkiye's agenda is of great importance for the Turkmens in Iraq," he maintained.

A commission composed of representatives of Turkmen, Kurdish and Arab parties from Kirkuk had failed to reach a consensus on the disputed areas and Article 140 was abolished by the end of 2007.

While Kurdish political leaders argue that article 140 should be applied to determine the status of Kirkuk, the city's Turkmens and Arabs state that the article ended legally at the end of 2007.