Asia-Europe Meeting

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"ASEM" and "Asem" redirect here. For the Kazakhstani singer, see Asem Tasbulatova.

The Asia-Europe Meeting (ASEM) was officially established in 1996 at the first summit in Bangkok. ASEM is an interregional forum which consists of the European Commission and the twenty-five members of the European Union (EU) and of fourteen Asian countries (the People's Republic of China, Japan, and South Korea and the 10 ASEAN member states of Brunei, Cambodia, Indonesia, Laos, Malaysia, Mongolia, Myanmar, the Philippines, Singapore, Thailand and Vietnam).

The main components of the ASEM process, which has so far been loosely organized, include:-

  • political dialogue
  • security and the economy
  • education and culture

or the so-called three pillars.

In general, the process is considered by the parties involved to be a way of deepening the relations between Asia and Europe at all levels, which is deemed necessary to achieve a more balanced political and economic world order. The process is enhanced by the biannual meetings of heads of state, alternately in Europe and Asia, and political, economic, and cultural meetings and events at all kinds of other levels.

In February 1997, ASEM member countries established Asia-Europe Foundation (ASEF), which is based in Singapore and mandated to promote better mutual understanding between the peoples of Asia and Europe through greater intellectual, cultural, and people-to-people exchanges. The Foundation is funded by contributions from the member governments, but the cost of many of its projects are shared by other institutions as well as private corporations of ASEM countries. One way ASEF carries out its mandate is by creating its own projects. Some of these initiatives include Asia-Europe Lecture, Asia-Europe Young Artists' Painting Competition and Exhibition, Informal Human Rights Seminar, Asia-Europe Youth Co-operation Network, and ASEF Editors' Roundtable.

The meetings have been held in:

ASEM 6 took place in Helsinki, Finland between 10th and 11th of September 2006. India, Mongolia and Pakistan were invited to participate in future meetings.[1]

[edit] Protests

Various Finnish anarchist groups protested the meeting in support of Chinese workers who had allegedly been oppressed by their government (announcement). The protest was broken up by the Finnish police before it had even started, though, because of expected vandalism (YLE news article).

[edit] G UNIT

Earlier protests by supporters of the Chinese Falun Gong movement outside the Chinese embassy, and a separate protest by a coalition of civic groups under the banner 'Helsinki 2006', ended peacefully.

[edit] External links