Moscow: Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Turkish counterpart Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Tuesday began negotiations on the situation in northeastern Syria hours before the expiry of a ceasefire between Turkey's armed forces and Kurdish militias.
The five-day ceasefire, which was agreed on October 17, ends at 10.00 pm local time (7.00 pm GMT), reported media.
After receiving Erdogan at the Black Sea Sochi resort, Putin said, "the situation in the region is very tense."
"We all understand it. I think that our meeting today, our consultations, are very necessary," Putin added in an encounter streamed on Russian public television.
Putin said that he is confident the current level of Russian-Turkish relations would play a part in the settlement of all current issues affecting the region paving the way for answers to even the most complex of questions.
"There are many issues. The negotiations will be very complex, it is evident," Dmitri Peskov, Russian presidential spokesman, said shortly before the start of the bilateral meeting.
The Turkish government has vowed to resume its military offensive on the Turkey-Syria border the minutes the ceasefire expires if the Kurdish-led People's Protection Units (YPG) and Democratic Union Party (PYD) continue to have a presence in the area.
The Turkish government, which considers the Kurdish-led People's Protection Units (YPG) and Democratic Union Party (PYD) as terrorists, has vowed to resume its military offensive at 10:01 pm if one single Kurdish fighter was left in the region.