GETTY The EU has tabled a deal for Turkey in exchange for a clampdown on migrants

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The daunting prospect of millions of Turks moving to Britain arose after EU leaders tabled a deal in exchange for help stemming the flood of migrants into Europe. They are offering the huge country £2billion in cash, visa-free travel for its citizens and speeded up membership talks if it clamps down on people trafficking and migration across its borders. The deal was expected to be signed off by political leaders at a summit in Brussels last night, European Council president Donald Tusk said. The plan, spearheaded by German chancellor Angela Merkel, will make Muslim-dominated Turkey the EU’s 29th member state. The deal has provoked anger and prompted fears that Europe’s doors will be left wide open to Islamic extremists.

75 million people will have freedom of movement to come to the rest of Europe and to this country Nigel Farage

Ukip leader Nigel Farage said: “This isn’t just a deal to deal with migration across the Mediterranean. What Merkel is proposing is that we fast track Turkey as members of the EU. “What that will mean is 75 million people who will have freedom of movement to come to the rest of Europe and to this country.” Speaking to Dermot Murnaghan on Sky News yesterday Mr Farage added: “A recent reputable poll showed that eight per cent of the Turkish population are Islamic State sympathisers. We must be literally mad.”

GETTY Cameron:Turkey need to be part of the solution to the migrant crisis

GETTY Merkel: We will agree on the EU Turkey action plan

When Prime Minister David Cameron arrived in Brussels yesterday he said: “This summit matters because we need a comprehensive solution to the migrant crisis in Europe and that involves Turkey.” Chancellor Merkel gave her blunt assessment of the situation saying: “We will agree on the EU Turkey action plan. “One main part of this EU-Turkey plan will be how we can replace illegal migration by legal migration; how we can improve the situation of refugees within Turkey.” Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu called it an “historic day” for his country. The only barriers to Turkey joining the EU bloc appear to be its human rights record and Cyprus, which refuses to accept its sworn enemy as a fellow member until it recognises the island’s government. The EU’s refugee crisis has been fuelled by the hundreds of thousands of migrants crossing into the bloc from Turkey either by sea or over land borders with Greece and Bulgaria.

GETTY European Council President Donald Tusk