By SARA MALM FOR MAILONLINE and AFP PUBLISHED: 10:42 GMT, 24 March 2016 | UPDATED: 15:59 GMT, 24 March 2016

Greece says NO migrants have arrived in last 24 hours for first time since EU-Turkey deal, but France's Defence Minister warns 800,000 are in Libya heading for Europe

No migrants or refugees arrive via boat to Greece in the past 24 hours

First time zero arrivals since EU-Turkey deal came into force Sunday

Deal aims to deter from crossing Mediterranean from Turkey to Greece

French Defence Minister warns 800,000 will cross from Libya instead

No migrants have arrived on Greek shores for the past 24 hours, a first since the deal between the EU and Turkey to send back new arrivals came in force on Sunday.

The deal will see all new arrivals in Greece returned to Turkey, and aims to deter migrants and refugees from making the dangerous crossing over the Mediterranean Sea.

However, France's Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said 800,000 migrants are in Libya hoping to cross to Europe, amid fears the shutdown of the Turkey-Greece route could encourage people to attempt the even more dangerous Mediterranean crossing to Italy.

Le Drian told Europe 1 radio that an estimated 800,000 migrants were in Libya, hoping to reach Europe after fleeing conflict and poverty in the Middle East and elsewhere.

More than 100,000 people crossed the Mediterranean Sea in the first two months of 2016 alone, according to the UN refugee agency.

While the zero number of new arrivals in the past 24 hours indicate that the EU-Turkey deal has had an effect on the influx, bad weather may also explain the halt in boat arrivals from neighbouring Turkey, as the Aegean has been buffeted by storm-force winds since Wednesday.

The EU and Ankara struck a deal on Friday aiming to cut off the sea crossing from Turkey to the islands, which bore the brunt of a refugee wave last year.

The agreement, under which all migrants landing on the Greek islands face being sent back to Turkey, went into effect early on Sunday.

Despite the deal 1,662 people arrived on Monday, but this fell to 600 on Tuesday and 260 on Wednesday.

Greek authorities have been using the relative calm to set in place the logistics for sending people back, which includes deploying 4,000 security personnel and asylum experts.

Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras was to chair a ministerial meeting Thursday to assess the implementation of the accord.

In 2015 more than a million migrants entered Europe, about half of them Syrians fleeing war, with Germany shouldering most of the burden.

Of these, around 850,000 people made the sea crossing to Greece from Turkey -- a route that also claimed more than 300 lives.

Under the migrant deal, for every Syrian sent back, the EU will resettle one Syrian from Turkey, a country that is hosting nearly three million people who have fled Syria's five-year civil war.

The idea is to reduce the incentive for Syrian refugees to board dangerous smugglers' boats to cross to Greece, encouraging them instead to stay in Turkish refugee camps to win a chance at resettlement in Europe.

The EU will also speed up talks on Ankara's bid to join the 28-nation bloc, will double refugee aid to six billion euros (£4.74 billion), and give visa-free travel to Turks in Europe's Schengen passport-free zone by June.

The deal also plans major aid for Greece, a country now struggling not only with a debt crisis but with some 47,500 migrants stranded on its territory, thousands of them at the Macedonian border.

All new arrivals in Greece are being taken to registration centres set up on five Aegean islands.

Those seeking asylum will stay there while their application is considered by Greek and European officials.

Medical charity Doctors Without Borders (MSF), the UN refugee agency, the International Rescue Committee and the Norwegian Refugee Council have all criticised the EU-Turkey deal on ethical grounds and scaled back some of their activities.

'We took the extremely difficult decision to end our activities in Moria [a migrant camp on Lesbos] because continuing to work inside would make us complicit in a system we consider to be both unfair and inhumane,' Marie Elisabeth Ingres, MSF's head mission in Greece, said on Wednesday.

'We will not allow our assistance to be instrumentalised for a mass expulsion operation and we refuse to be part of a system that has no regard for the humanitarian or protection needs of asylum seekers and migrants.'


Read more: Greece marks first day without migrant arrivals after EU-Turkey deal | Daily Mail Online