EU Commission head Jean-Claude Juncker warned Russia Thursday that the 28-nation bloc will only lift its sanctions if the Kremlin fully implements a Ukraine peace deal.
"The next step is clear, full implementation of the agreement -- no more, no less," Juncker told Russia's main economic forum in Saint Petersburg ahead of a meeting with President Vladimir Putin.
"This is the only way to begin our conversation and the only way to lift the economic sanctions that have been imposed."
The Juncker-Putin meeting will be their first such encounter in Russia since the EU slapped sanctions on Moscow over Ukraine in 2014.
Putin is hosting Juncker as well as Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi at the three-day conference in Russia's second city just weeks before the expiry of EU sanctions that have helped push Russia's economy into recession.
Putin will also sit down with U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon alongside the world body's envoy on Syria Staffan de Mistura, as he seeks to recast Moscow as a more stable partner for the West and bolster his country's flagging economy.
- Battered financial sector -
The EU has tied the lifting of the punishing sanctions that have battered Russia's financial sector to the implementation of a deal brokered by the leaders of France and Germany in Minsk in February 2015 to end the pro-Russian uprising in east Ukraine.
But the accord has stalled as the violence -- that Kiev and the West says is masterminded by Moscow -- rumbles on and despite some signs of cracks in the EU over extending the sanctions when Juncker insisted the bloc was "united."
Diplomatic sources in Brussels told AFP Thursday that EU members could agree to renew the sanctions against Russia for six months as early as next week as they look to clear the schedule ahead of a summit at the end of the month set to be dominated by the fallout from Britain's EU referendum.
Despite the frosty relations with Moscow, however, Juncker insisted he had come to Russia to try to improve relations.
"If our relationship today is troubled and marked by mistrust, it is not broken beyond repair. We need to mend it, and I believe we can," he said.
Putin's top foreign policy adviser Yury Ushakov has described the Putin-Juncker encounter as "very important" and said the current difficulties between the EU and Russia would be discussed "frankly."
- Back to business? -
Despite the worst feud between Moscow and the West since the Cold War there are a host of top European business figures at the conference that Moscow has tried to pitch as its answer to Davos.
Putin is set to oversee an important contract signing for the construction in Russia of a major liquefied gas plant with the head of Royal Dutch Shell.
The CEOs of firms including France's Total, Societe Generale and JCDecaux and European multi-national Schneider Electric are also heading to the forum.
Businessmen say they are keen to bolster ties despite the sanctions -- which saw Russia slap a retaliatory embargo on most agricultural produce from the EU and the U.S. -- and say Moscow is trying to repair its tarnished image.
Former French president Nicolas Sarkozy, who met Putin on Wednesday, said he had asked the Russian leader to unilaterally lift Moscow's embargo, to "launch a positive dynamic" that would see the EU remove its sanctions.
Russia's energy-driven economy -- hit by both the West's punitive measures and the drop in oil prices -- has slumped into the longest recession since Putin came to power some 16 years ago.
Despite claims from officials that the economy could return to limited growth soon, there are serious fears of a prolonged economic stagnation and the authorities are pledging much-needed structural reforms to attract investors.
"We need to change the structure of the economy to make it less dependent on external factors," Finance Minister Anton Siluanov told journalists.
"The strategic task is to generate higher rates of growth in the economy."
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