UK Prime Minister David
Cameron is hosting an international conference in London to help Somalia
end more than two decades of conflict.
The conference is focusing on rebuilding security forces and tackling rape - a largely taboo subject.Somalia is widely regarded as a failed state, hit by an Islamist insurgency, piracy and a famine from 2010 to 2012.
At least seven people were killed in a car bomb attack in the capital, Mogadishu, on Sunday.
Al-Shabab, which is part of al-Qaeda, said it carried out the attack.
The meeting - which Mr Cameron is
co-hosting with Somalia's President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud - follows
similar conferences in London and the Turkish city of Istanbul last
year, amid growing international concern that Somalia has turned into a
haven for al-Qaeda-linked militants.
"I hope we can all get behind a long-term security plan - one that ends the Shabab's reign of terror forever," Mr Cameron said.
"I also hope we can improve transparency and accountability so people know where resources are going. We also need to continue the process of rebuilding the Somali state, with all the regions of Somalia around the table and the neighbouring countries too."
BBC Somalia analyst Mary Harper says there has been a dramatic change in the country in the past year.
There is a new government - the first one in more than two decades to be recognised by the United States, the International Monetary Fund (IMF) and other key players, she says.
Somali aid worker Halima Ali Adan told the BBC the decision to tackle the issue at the conference was a big step forward.
"Sexual violence is something that was not ever spoken about in Somalia," she said.
"The international community themselves have seen the importance of this issue to be addressed as soon as possible because it is actually overwhelming."
Delegates from more than 50 countries and organisations are expected to attend the meeting.
On Monday, Qatar said Sunday's suicide attack in Mogadishu had targeted its officials, Qatar's official QNA news agency reported.
The four officials were travelling in armoured vehicles belonging to the Somali government when the convoy was attacked, it said.
None of the Qatari nationals were injured, QNA reported.
However, 10 other people were wounded in the attack, according to a BBC correspondent in Mogadishu.
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