Vice President and Prime Minister Khalid Bahah said on Monday the talks in Geneva scheduled for June 14 will focus on how the UN resolution 2216 on Yemen will be implemented.
The resolution was issued after the Houthi militants with support from the forces loyal to the former regime ousted the transition government. It called on the militants to cede power, withdraw from cities, return the army's weapons and stop violence and threatening regional countries.
At a news conference in the Saudi capital Riyadh, he said the talks will not seek reconciliation with the Houthi militants who carried out a coup against the transition government.
Between 5 and 7 representatives from the government and its allies and the Houthi group and the General People's Congress will attend the talks, he said.
The UN envoy to Yemen Ismail Ould Cheikh said on Sunday Yemenis were responding positively to the UN call for participation in the talks.
Cheikh's remark given to Aljazeera TV coinciding with a statement by the spokesperson for the Houthi Group that they accepted to go for the talks without conditions.
Moreover, Bahah said the government will agree to a long ceasefire on condition the Houthi group withdraws its militias from Yemeni cities.
Meantime, the government plans to come back and resume its duties from inside Yemen but there are fears at the moment it will face dangers, he said.
President Abd Rabbuh Mansour Hadi and the government have been staying in and acting from Riyadh for more than two months.
They were ousted in September, left house arrest by the Houthis in February and arrived in Saudi Arabia after the Saudi-led Arab military operation was launched against the Houthis in late March.
The Houthis are committing heinous crimes including the use of prisoners and people as human shields, he said.
There are no plans to dissolve the Yemeni army neither now nor later because the current army will be the core for the new national forces, he added.