NAIROBI, June 9 (Xinhua) -- A western-backed meeting aimed at stabilizing
war-torn Somalia is set to kick off in Rome, a UN envoy for the Horn of Africa
nation announced here Tuesday.
A statement from UN Special Representative for Somalia Ahmedou
Ould-Abdallah said representatives from more than 35 countries and international
organizations are expected to attend the 15th meeting of the International
Contact Group to be held from June 9-10.
The meeting will include discussions on the political, security,
humanitarian and development situation. Piracy will be high on the agenda.
Somalia's Prime Minister will attend the meeting.
"This is an important time for Somalia and it is vital that the
international community gives a strong message of support to the legal
government," said Ould-Abdallah who chairs the International Contact Group.
"The regional organization IGAD, along with the African Union, are both
extremely concerned, as is the wider international community, by the long Somali
crisis. They have shown us the way at their recent meetings," he noted in a
statement issued in Nairobi.
The UN envoy said Somalia has always attracted support from its friends
abroad.
The International Contact Group, established by the United States and
Norway, held its first meeting in 2005 in New York and its second in London. In
recent years the membership of the group has expanded greatly, demonstrating
increased interest in resolving the Somali crisis.
"These talks will be about supporting the legitimate, internationally
recognized government," said Ould-Abdallah.
"There is no question of any inter-Somali discussions taking place as some
have tried to suggest. The ICG is a group of friends of Somalia not a
negotiating forum.
"I would like to thank the Italian Government for offering to host this
meeting. We are looking forward to a positive, fruitful discussion."
Somalia's UN-backed transitional government is battling against rival
Islamist groups in violence that has swelled the country's more than 1 million
internal refugee population.
Aid agencies say 3 million people need urgent food aid in one of the
world's worst humanitarian crises.