| South Korean, Asean officials look ahead to special  summit, stronger regional ties
 BUSAN (The Korean Herald/ANN)--Ahead of the highly  anticipated summit in Busan next month between the leaders of South Korea and  the Association of Southeast Asian Nations, top officials from participating  countries gathered in the southern port city Wednesday and voiced high  expectations for the future of the relationship between South Korea and the  Asean nations.
 South Korean Ambassador to Asean  Lim Sung-nam, Asean-Korea Center Secretary-General Lee Hyuk, Busan Mayor Oh  Keo-don and Myanmar Ambassador to South Korea U Thant Sin said they looked  forward to the upcoming summit, calling it a steppingstone to stronger
 
                    
                      |  |  
                      | Pictured (from left) to right are South Korean  Ambassador to Asean Lim Sung-nam, Busan Mayor Oh Keo-don, Myanmar Ambassador to  South Korea U Thant Sin and Asean-Korea Center Secretary-General Lee Hyuk, at a  press conference in Busan on Wednesday to kick off the event “Asean-Korea  Train: Advancing Together.” 
 |  South  Korea-Asean ties and to economic prosperity and peace on the Korean Peninsula.“In the past 30 years, the  relationship between South Korea and Asean has grown to an astonishing degree.  Trade volume rose 20-fold and human exchanges 100-fold. I believe the purpose  of the South Korea-Asean special summit is to craft a blueprint for the future  by building on previous achievements,” Lim Sung-nam  said at a press conference in Busan earlier in the week to kick off a train  ride organised to celebrate the ties between South Korea and Asean.
 “Rather than (viewing it as) a  final destination, we hope the summit will usher in South Korean President Moon  Jae-in’s New Southern Policy 2.0,” he added.
 In the run-up to the summit the  Asean-Korea Centre, an intergovernmental organisation that promotes economic  and sociocultural cooperation between Asean and Korea,  launched a three-day train voyage called “Asean-Korea Train: Advancing  Together.” Some 140 government  representatives, businesspeople, academics, artists, media professionals and  young people from 10 Asean countries are riding the train along with 60  counterparts from South Korea. The delegation is to travel across the country  until Friday.
 The purpose of the journey,  hosted by South Korea’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs, was to celebrate the 30  years of partnership between Asean and South Korea and to usher in a stronger  future of prosperity and peace, the organisation said.
 South Korea and Asean initiated  a dialogue partnership in 1989 and have since become crucial partners for  peace, trade and cultural exchanges, bolstered even more by South Korean  President Moon Jae-in’s signature New Southern Policy.
 “Cooperation and exchange begins  with people. The Asean-Korea Train is meaningful in that it will lay a firm  foundation for delegations from 10 Asean countries and South Korea to better  understand each other and form a friendly bond. This will also (help) them to work together for the  future,” Lee Hyuk said.
 Echoing Lim and Lee, U Thant Sin  said, “The past 30 years have witnessed an exemplary growth not just in  quantity (but) also quality, which has pulled the two regions closer,  connecting government, businesses and people like never before. Over the years  Asean has become a resilient supporter to Korea’s policy to achieve peace and  (stability) on the Korean Peninsula.”
 He noted that Asean is Korea’s  second-largest trade and investment partner as well as its most popular tourist  destination, while Korea is Asean’s No. 5 economic partner and its top  destination for work, study and travel.
 As the host of the summit, Busan  Mayor Oh said the city will do its best to ensure the success of the summit in  a smooth and safe manner, and to use it as an opportunity to promote Busan as  an attractive tourist destination that offers both city life and beautiful  natural surroundings.
 Meanwhile, the three-day trip  includes visits to Gyeongju, Busan, Suncheon and Gwangju, where participants  will take part in economic, cultural and peace celebrations representing all  3Ps of the New Southern Policy. The 3Ps are  people, prosperity and peace.
 (Latest Update October 18, 2019)
 |