A Muslim man reads from the Koran at the Grand Mosque in Brussels | Philippe Huguen/AFP via Getty Images Turkey won’t cooperate with Belgian intelligence after mosque row: report Belgium blocked funding for the mosque after reports it was engaged in ‘unacceptable practices.’

Ankara will not share terrorism-related information with Belgium as a result of a row over a Turkish mosque in the Flanders region, Belgian media reported Wednesday citing intelligence sources.

Flemish Home Affairs Minister Liesbeth Homans last week said she planned to withdraw official recognition of a Turkish mosque in the town of Beringen and stop it from receiving subsidies after intelligence service disclosed it was participating in "unacceptable practices."

Homans said she had received "alarming messages" about the mosque in December. A justice ministry report showed the mosque failed to promote integration, created tension between groups in society and introduced foreign conflicts into Flemish society.

Ankara believes Belgium is using the mosque row as cover to investigate Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan's government.

As a result, a source told Het Laatste Nieuws, “If Belgians want any information about a [Belgian] fighter leaving to Syria, they will not receive anything.”

The row is the latest in a dispute between Ankara and EU countries stemming from a crackdown on dissent following last year's failed coup and a constitutional referendum, due April 16, which critics say will bring the country closer to authoritarianism.