London meeting to bolster Yemen in al Qaeda fight
LONDON (Reuters) - A high-level international meeting in London on Wednesday aims to bolster Yemen''s fight against al Qaeda by helping it tackle the poverty that can create a breeding ground for militants. The attack drove home how al Qaeda could threaten Western interests from Yemen and highlighted the risk that the country could become a failed state, compounding security challenges already posed by lawless Somalia just across the Gulf of Aden. Wednesday''s meeting, which brings together the Group of Eight world powers, Yemen''s neighbors in the Gulf Cooperation Council, as well as Egypt, Jordan and Turkey, is designed to give a strong signal of support to Yemen, while pushing for economic development and reform. The European Union, United Nations, World Bank and International Monetary Fund (IMF) will also be represented. "Yemen is not a failed state but it''s an incredibly fragile state," British Foreign Office Minister Ivan Lewis said in a video on a government website. "We want to get in there early to offer assistance and to prevent Yemen becoming a failed state," he said. The meeting, scheduled to start at 1600 GMT and last just two hours, would focus on helping the Yemeni government move its economy forward, creating jobs and improving health, education and law and order, he said. PRESSURE FOR REFORM Western delegates will also be pushing Yemen to press ahead with economic reforms and to tackle corruption. Yemen has declared war on al Qaeda under pressure from Washington and Saudi Arabia, its oil-producing neighbor and its main aid backer along with the United States. Apart from al Qaeda, Yemen faces a Shi''ite Muslim revolt in the north, a secessionist movement in the south, water shortages, failing oil income and weak state control. |