US Secretary of State John Kerry and his Iranian counterpart Mohammad Javad Zarif held marathon talks here to resolve the remaining issues on Tehran's contentious nuclear programme, as a meeting of the P5+1 nations with the Islamic republic ended on a positive note.
The bilateral meeting between Kerry and Zarif was also attended by US Energy Secretary Ernest Moniz and Iranian Atomic Energy Organisation director Ali Akbar Salehi.
The negotiations which began late last night in this Swiss city ended after two-and-half hours with the two sides agreeing on resuming negotiations later today.
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The negotiators from two sides earlier spent more than five hours negotiating technical details of the nuclear talks.
The US and Iranian diplomats along with negotiators from the P5+1 group have been meeting in Geneva since last three days to smoothen out major bumps in reaching a nuclear deal.
The tricky negotiations have mainly been over Iranian uranium enrichment and the pace of removing sanctions, which the US wants to stagger over time.
Kerry had warned yesterday that "significant gaps" remain ahead of the March 31 which the Obama administration has set to agree on a political framework for the deal.
Two deadlines for a permanent agreement have been missed since a November 2013 interim deal in which Iran was given limited sanctions relief in exchange for diluting its stock of fissile material from 20 per cent enriched uranium to five per cent.
Meanwhile, the meeting of P5+1 - China, Russia, the UK, the US, France and Germany - group nations was held yesterday at the EU mission here and was attended by Iran's Deputy Foreign Minister Seyed Abbas Araghchi.
"It was a fruitful meeting but we cannot claim any progress yet. It's too early to say," Araghchi said after the meeting.
The US side was attended by Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs Wendy Sherman.
The six powerful nations are trying to broker a deal with Iran to end a more than a decade-long standoff over its nuclear programme in return for an easing of sanctions.
Iran, however, has maintained that its nuclear programme is for peaceful purposes.