A 2-year-old British girl reportedly died after contracting E. coli at a “disgusting” hotel in Turkey, the child’s devastated mom claimed.

Little Allie Birchall and her family from Greater Manchester were on vacation at the all-inclusive Crystal Sunset Luxury Resort and Spa outside the city of Antalya when Allie and her family got sick, the UK’s Mirror reported.

According to the news outlet, all members of the family experienced stomach cramps and diarrhea during their 10-day stay at the hotel over the summer, but Allie’s condition severely worsened when the family returned home.

The child was rushed to Royal Bolton Hospital in the UK and later put in an induced coma.

On Aug. 3, Allie’s family took her off life support and she died just three weeks before what would have been her third birthday, the report said.

“Food was sometimes left uncovered and occasionally served lukewarm, and there were birds occasionally flying around the food,” said Allie’s heartbroken mom, Katie Dawson, according to the Mirror.

“We saw feces in the swimming pool and I spoke to other [people on vacation] who saw the feces in the pool on more than one occasion, and staff just scooped it out without closing the pool or giving it a thorough clean,” Dawson claimed.

The mom added: “The walls in the children’s toilets were also smeared with feces. It was disgusting.”

According to the Mirror, Allie contracted E. coli, which later led her to develop hemolytic uremic syndrome — a severe complication of E. coli infection that can cause kidney failure.

“Allie was such a beautiful, happy girl and we are all utterly heartbroken,” the mom said. “We still can’t believe she’s gone.”

Public Health England is investigating the case, according to the Mirror.

Meanwhile, Crystal Sunset Luxury Resort and Spa commented on the situation in a statement to The Post saying that “there are many uncertain points in this case.”

“We express our deepest condolences to the family of baby Allie Birchall. We are in great sorrow for the death of Allie,” the hotel said.

The hotel noted that the family stayed in the hotel from July 12 to July 22.

“We checked all our records. There are no notice or complaints from the family during their stay,” the resort said. “They did not give any information to the hotel management, neither the reception, guest relations, agency’s in-resort rep, hotel’s health unit, regional hospitals about any health problems.”

“As the hotel management team, we have no knowledge about [Dawson’s] claims from the beginning and development periods.”

The hotel says it only learned of Dawson’s allegations through a review on TripAdvisor.

“It was difficult to understand why she wrote her claims on a review web site instead of informing us, specially in such a legal case which needs judicial process,” thje hotel said.

The resort claimed that it’s certified for food safety and the hotel is “audited once every week on every area including food, kitchen, water, pools, rooms, toilets etc. Especially food and buffets are of great important for hotel management.”

“Every toilet is inspected by a housekeeping team member every 20 minutes. The children toilets are subject to higher attention and hygiene audits,” the hotel said. “Pools are the most audited parts of the hotel. An automatic pump disinfects the pools continuously.”

The resort said Dawson’s claim about feces in the swimming pool “is unacceptable.”

The hotel also pointed out that people typically get sick from E. coli two to four days after contracting it.

“If this occurred in the hotel, the baby should have been suffering stomach pain, and other effect earlier, the hotel said, adding, “The family [alleges] that they have been suffering from gastroentric illness. Do they have any reports about this health problem? Did they go to the hospital as well?”