Erdoğan holds talks with EU officials in bid to revise migrant deal

President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan paid a visit to Belgium on March 9 in a bid to revise an EU-Turkey deal because the terms of the agreement were no longer effective.

Erdoğan was to meet with NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg late March 9 in his Brussels program, after the Daily News went to print. He was to hold talks with European Council President Charles Michel and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.

The summit came following rising tension at the Greek-Turkish land border after tens of thousands of migrants gathered there in hopes of crossing into the EU.

The EU made a deal with Turkey In 2016 and closed the so-called Balkan route, once considered the main pathway for hundreds of thousands of refugees fleeing war in Syria.

In return, the EU offered Turkey 6 billion euros ($6.8 billion) along with visa liberalization and upgrading the Customs Union agreement, opening new negotiation chapter incentives as part of the deal.

Ankara has repeatedly complained that Europe has failed to keep its promises under the 2016 EU-Turkey refugee deal to help migrants and stem further migrant waves. The Turkish government is complaining that the EU aid delivery to the refugees in Turkey is lagged, while Brussels say the total amount is contracted and is in the pipeline.

The EU has grown concerned after thousands of migrants flocked to Pazarkule, a border gate with Greece after Turkish officials announced on Feb. 28 they would no longer try to stop irregular migrants from reaching Europe.

The announcement came after an attack by regime forces on Turkish troops in the Idlib de-escalation zone in northwestern Syria, which killed 34 soldiers.

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