Turkey has not received any money from the European Union for Syrian refugees living in the country under a deal reached in March meant to see Ankara stem the flow of migration to the bloc, a spokesman said on Friday.
“We have not received any money yet”, said Ibrahim Kalin, a spokesman for President Recep Erdogan.
He said 134 million dollars has been earmarked for refugee programmes but so far nothing has been delivered.
This week, EU data showed that the bloc has only taken in 177 Syrian refugees from Turkey in the past two months, although it had pledged to step up resettlement schemes.
Turkey hosts more than 2.2 million Syrian refugees, according to the United Nations.
Kalin said the government had spent more than 10 billion dollars on these people since the civil war broke out in 2011.
The Turkey-EU deal is meant to see the bloc give three billion euros at first, a sum that can later be doubled.
In addition, Turkey hopes to gain visa free access to the EU’s internal Schengen border-free zone.
The deal is currently in jeopardy, as Turkey is refusing to narrow its vague anti-terrorism laws, in line with an EU demand.
Turkey served as a major gateway country for refugees to reach Europe.
Although after the deal was reached, the security forces clamped down on human smugglers, drastically cutting the number of migrants taking dangerous boat rides to nearby Greek islands.