The suicide bombing in Manchester has played a major part in this respect. On 22 May, Salman Ramadan Abedi, a 22-year-old Briton of Libyan decent, set off an improvised explosive devise at Manchester Arena near the end of a concert by American singer Ariana Grande. The attack claimed the lives of 22 people, including children and teenagers, and left 120 injured.
Family photo of the leaders with a breathtaking background: the Greek Theatre. #G7Taormina pic.twitter.com/Fj9gd0WvPf
— G7 Italy 2017 (@g7) 26 мая 2017 г.
A day later, Italian Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni called on the G7 leaders to send a "message displaying the strongest possible commitment" to fight terrorism. Speaking at the NATO summit in Brussels on Thursday, Gentiloni said that counterterrorism efforts should be taken to the next level.
"For this reason tomorrow in Taormina I will promote the adoption of a declaration against terrorism and violent extremism," he added.
Counterterrorism has also been a major issue for United States President Donald Trump, who was promoting his vision of establishing "a coalition of nations who share the aim of stamping out extremism and providing our children a hopeful future" during his visit to Saudi Arabia.
Relations with Russia are also expected to be on the agenda of the summit, to a certain extent due to Moscow's counterterrorism operation in Syria and its overall efforts to tackle extremism. During his speech at the NATO Summit, Gentiloni noted that NATO should foster its relations with Russia, calling for a "significant dialogue" with Moscow.
The North Korean nuclear and missile programs, as well as relations with Iran will also be some of the issues of particular interest at the summit, which European Council President Donald Tusk described as "the most challenging" in years in opening the briefing.
In addition, in February, Trump referred to Iran as "the number one terrorist state." While in Israel during his first overseas trip, the US president said that Tehran "must cease its deadly funding, training and equipping of terrorists and militias and it must cease immediately."
The G7 leaders are also expected to discuss migration and human trafficking.
"Taormina will thus be primarily a security summit, with development and especially the economy taking a secondary place. It will also be a substantial success, with President Trump having learned that he must adjust to his real democratic peers to pioneer the badly needed solutions to key global challenges that America alone cannot produce," Director of the G7 Research Group John Kirton asserted in a report titled "G7 Italy: The Taormina Summit 2017."
Never miss a story again — sign up to our Telegram channel and we'll keep you up to speed!