PRIME TIME NEWS 22:00 Welcome to program. You′re watching Prime Time News. Live from Seoul... I′m Sean Lim. And I′m Kang Chery. Thanks for joining us. Title: President Park to secure support for North Korea policies at UN General Assembly For the first time since taking office last year, President Park Geun-hye will make her diplomatic debut at the UN General Assembly on this Wenesday. In her address, the South Korean leader will likely focus on efforts to prepare the two Koreas for reunification. Choi You-sun takes us through the president′s schedule for day two at the UN. President Park Geun-hye′s UN General Assembly address is widely expected to lay out the details of her vision for unification of the Korean peninsula and seeking international support for the plan. Back in March, the South Korean leader proposed the two Koreas increase Seoul′s humanitarian support to Pyongyang and people-to-people exchanges... as an initial step towards preparing for reunification. She has even launched a committee in the South to get ready for the unprecedented process. President Park will also likely talk about rebuilding inter-Korean trust to resolve the North Korean nuclear weapons issue, and to bring peace and prosperity to Northeast Asia and Eurasia. It′s also possible she might touch on the North′s human rights abuses. Aside from the peninsula′s security and foreign policy issues, the president will highlight Korea′s contributions to other global issues as a major middle power. At the U.S.-led Security Council meeting on foreign terrorist fighters - a mounting issue of concern in the Middle East - President Park is expected to stress the need for international cooperation to counter the phenomenon of foreigners joining Islamist extremist groups. She will also announce ways that Korea is willing to help in the global fight, which will likely be in the form of humanitarian assistance. At a high-level meeting on global education, presided over by the UN Secretary-General, President Park will speak about Korea′s education system and vow to work to advance education worldwide, ahead of next year′s World Education Forum in Korea. Choi You-sun, Arirang News, New York. Title: United Nations puts spotlight on climate change And the heads of states from around the world agreed with her message. Leaders including U.S. President Barack Obama highlighted the need to start dealing with the issue now,… rather than later. Kim Hyun-bin reports. With the threat of Islamic State militants and the spread of Ebola in West Africa competing for attention, the United Nations is also setting its sights on climate change. The UN has given 125 countries and their representatives at the General Assembly a platform to explain their plans to address the problem. U.S. President Barack Obama stressed the need for emerging economies to make stronger commitments... and move past the rich-poor divide that has created a barrier in UN negotiations. "