ASEAN Tourism in the 2025 International Year of Peace and Trust

Sustainable
Written by Imtiaz Muqbil

With brutal wars raging every day, it’s an interesting move for the UN to declare 2025 the International Year of Peace and Trust. ASEAN Tourism sees an window of opportunities.

2025 will mark the 80th anniversary since the end of World War II and the approval of the UN Charter, a good time to reflect on the state of the world since then.

The UN General Assembly has proclaimed 2025 the International Year of Peace and Trust (IYPT), and called for a fullscale mobilization of efforts to build sustainable peace, solidarity and harmony via political dialogue, mutual understanding and cooperation amongst nations and peoples.

ASEAN 2025

Within ASEAN, 2025 will mark the 50th anniversary since the April 1975 end of the Vietnam War and the last year of the “ASEAN 2025: Forging Ahead Together” master blueprint. That gives the ASEAN tourism, the Industry of Peace, a golden opportunity to take the lead in putting Peace at the heart of the future development agenda, assert the “centrality” of ASEAN, counter efforts to sow socio-cultural divisions and raise the definition of “sustainability” to a whole new level.

UNGA Resolution

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ASEAN Tourism in the 2025 International Year of Peace and Trust

Approved on 21 March 2024, the UNGA resolution encourages all UN Member States, UN and other international, regional and subregional organisations, as well as civil society, the private sector, academia and individuals, to “disseminate the advantages of peace and trust, including through educational and public awareness-raising activities.” It invites the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) and the UN’s Department of Political and Peacebuilding Affairs to facilitate the implementation of the International Year.

Turkmenistan has proposed hosts an International Forum of Peace and Trust in December 2025, as a culminating event for the Year.

The resolution was sponsored by Armenia, Bahrain, Bangladesh, Belarus, Brazil, Burkina Faso, Cambodia, China, Djibouti, Germany, India, Iran, Israel, Kazakhstan, Lesotho, Liberia, Marshall Islands, Morocco, Nicaragua, Nigeria, Philippines, Qatar, Russian Federation, Rwanda, Singapore, Tajikistan, Timor-Leste, Türkiye, Turkmenistan, Uzbekistan, Vanuatu and Venezuela.

UN Sustainable Development Goals

The move is in line with the UN Sustainable Development Goals agenda as well as the Declaration and Programme of Action on a Culture of Peace.

The first UN Declaration and Programme of Action on a Culture of Peace was adopted by the UNGA in October 1999, exactly 25 years ago next year. In September 2019, the UNGA declared 2021 the first International Year of Peace and Trust. Another resolution in July 2022 declared that IYPT would be held every five years.

Reaffirming the purposes and principles of the UN Charter, especially the determination to save succeeding generations from the scourge of war, the resolution notes that sustainable development, human rights, peace and security are interconnected and mutually reinforcing. It:

The Six pillows of Peace and Trust

1) Acknowledges that peace and trust entail accepting differences and having the ability to listen to, recognize, respect and appreciate others, as well as living in a peaceful and united way,

2) Recognises that peace not only is the absence of conflict, but also requires a positive, dynamic participatory process where dialogue is encouraged and conflicts are solved in a spirit of mutual understanding and cooperation,

3) Recognises the urgent need to promote and strengthen preventive diplomacy and peaceful prevention of conflicts through multilateralism and political dialogue.

4) Emphasises the role of women and youth, children and older persons, especially the active participation of women in the prevention and resolution of conflicts and in activities promoting a culture of peace, including in post-conflict situations.

5) Recognises the importance of advancing equality, tolerance, human development, and promoting human rights, as well as investment in education to promote respect, reconciliation, and a culture of peace and non-violence,

6) Encourages the involvement of civil society organizations worldwide.

Windows of Opportunities for ASEAN Tourism

With escalating geopolitical conflicts and socio-cultural-ethnic polarisation posing a clear and present danger to the safety, security, and stability of Travel & Tourism globally, the IYTP opens a clear window of opportunity for the industry to rethink, refocus and reprioritize its future agenda.
ASEAN tourism is well placed to take the lead for several reasons:

  • 2025 will mark the 50th anniversary since the end of the Vietnam war, the first of a series of geopolitical events that led to the guns falling silent in Indochina after decades of conflict. Travel & Tourism played a key role in the post-war economic reconstruction process. Today, all the former war-torn countries (Vietnam, Laos and Cambodia) are members of ASEAN, with booming Travel & Tourism sectors.
  • 2025 will mark the last year of the “ASEAN 2025: Forging Ahead Together” roadmap and collection of blueprints covering economic, politics and security, society and culture, and connectivity. It will be a good chance to evaluate the progress in Travel & Tourism and plan a new strategy built around the concept of promoting Peace and Trust rather than just growing economies or creating jobs. That could make ASEAN the first regional bloc to do so, and no doubt lead others to join the bandwagon globally.
  • The ASEAN 2025 Blueprint was originally adopted at the annual ASEAN leaders summit in Kuala Lumpur in November 2015. In 2025, the ASEAN Tourism Forum will also be held in Malaysia (Johor state). That makes it a perfect place to officially launch the IYPT and unveil a roster of activities by which Travel & Tourism can build Peace and Trust. Intra-regional tourism is projected to play a significant role in keeping the 10-nation bloc’s economies on even keel, even more so if it can be used as a vehicle to get Myanmar, the vital weak link in the ASEAN chain, to deal with its internal problems.
  • 2025 will be only five years from the 2030 target of the UN Sustainable Development Goals. Although those goals have been officially declared unreachable in totality, it should not prevent ASEAN tourism from striving to achieve its own goals, especially SDG #16 (Promote peaceful and inclusive societies for sustainable development). The industry can reprioritize the five Ps of the SDGs to put PEACE at the top and then forge the PARTNERSHIPS to create PROSPERITY for the PEOPLE and also preserve the PLANET.

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About the author

Imtiaz Muqbil

Imtiaz Muqbil,
Executive Editor
Travel Impact Newswire

Bangkok-based journalist covering the travel and tourism industry since 1981. Currently editor and publisher of Travel Impact Newswire, arguably the only travel publication providing alternative perspectives and challenging conventional wisdom. I have visited every country in the Asia Pacific except North Korea and Afghanistan. Travel and Tourism is an intrinsic part of the history of this great continent but the people of Asia are a long way away from realizing the importance and value of their rich cultural and natural heritage.

As one of the longest-serving travel trade journalists in Asia, I have seen the industry go through many crises, from natural disasters to geopolitical upheavals and economic collapse. My goal is to get the industry to learn from history and its past mistakes. Really sickening to see the so-called “visionaries, futurists and thought-leaders” stick to the same old myopic solutions which do nothing to address the root causes of crises.

Imtiaz Muqbil
Executive Editor
Travel Impact Newswire

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