Inaugural Ai Everything MEA Egypt Opens with Sovereign AI and Global Intelligence Infrastructure at the Forefront
Cairo, Egypt – 11 February
2026: Ai Everything Middle East & Africa (MEA) Egypt
opened today to capacity crowds and high engagement, bringing together 350+ AI
enterprises and startups from 30+ countries, alongside 100+ global and regional
investors, policymakers, and technology leaders influencing the next phase of
artificial intelligence.
Hosted under the Patronage
of President of the Arab Republic of Egypt, H.E. Abdel Fattah El-Sisi, the
opening day set a clear and substantive focus on sovereign AI and
national-scale infrastructure as systems spanning data control, compute
architecture, energy efficiency, governance, and human trust.
Across the show floor and
conference stages, discussions reflected a shared reality - AI is rapidly
becoming core national infrastructure, comparable in importance to telecoms, healthcare,
and financial systems. The opening day positioned Cairo as a convergence of
strategic influence for governments and enterprises navigating that shift
across the Middle East and Africa.
Global
Leaders Debate the Foundations of Sovereign AI
The Sovereign AI Summit
anchored incisive conversations, bringing together chief AI scientists,
ministers, and industry leaders to examine what it takes to build, operate, and
sustain AI systems on a national scale.
Ruchir Puri, Chief Scientist
and Vice President at IBM, opened one of the most closely followed sessions,
unpacking the realities behind building sovereign AI — from questions on
ownership of data to the compute and AI architectures that determine long-term growth.
Ruchir shared: “You can partner or rely on others for infrastructure
capabilities, on-premises or in the cloud. But sovereignty comes from knowing
what applications are running, whether they are compliant, and whether data is
secure. Data is one of the most critical and underappreciated aspects; data is
the sovereign core.”
Puri also discussed over-scaling
by default, noting that many national and public-sector use cases are better
served by smaller, more efficient models - particularly as energy demand and
operating costs become central to AI planning.
That systems-level view was
echoed in a high-level government panel titled “AI sovereignty in a fragmented
world”, examining how nations are advancing AI under different political,
security and infrastructure conditions. H.E. Oumouri M’Madi Hassane,
Minister of Post, Telecommunications & Digital Economy Transparency of Comoros;
H.E. Huda Alwahidi, Deputy Minister Ministry of Telecommunication &
Digital Economy of Palestine; and H.E. Dr. Abdul Aziz AlMalik, Deputy
Minister for Research & Innovation, Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Environment,
Water & Agriculture discussed how AI can expand state capacity, but
also raise questions on responsible deployment, governance and ethics.
Human-Centric AI:
Responsibility at National Scale
Questions of trust and
responsibility moved to the forefront in a session with Margaret Mitchell,
Chief Ethics Scientist at Hugging Face, one of the world’s most
influential open-source AI platforms. Mitchell challenged the
assumption that AI systems can simply be “aligned” to universal human values,
arguing that many large-scale models are built as general-purpose tools that
fail to reflect local context, priorities, and cultural nuance. Margaret noted:
“We talk about aligning AI systems to global human values, but what's
happening is this sort of blunt instrument that's not reflective of individual
values and priorities.”
Cross-Sector
AI Use Cases Across the Show Floor
On the exhibition floor,
global and regional leaders showcased AI solutions already moving into
real-world deployment. At the centre of the show, telecom leader e& drew
crowds with AI systems designed for real-world deployment — from human-like AI
interactions and intelligent health insights to unified platforms connecting
education, sports, and business intelligence into a single AI-driven hub.
Cisco
highlighted secure AI infrastructure, observability and edge intelligence,
while Microsoft demonstrated how AI is already driving transformation
across governments and industries.
Infrastructure and
efficiency featured strongly with HPE, with their end-to-end portfolio designed
to support national and enterprise-scale workloads. Mohamed Wasfy, Country
Manager - Egypt, Libya & Sudan, HPE, shared: “Our AI strategy is about
unlocking ambition - transforming how people live and work by turning Egypt’s
rich data, vibrant talent, and national digital platforms into real economic
impact. As the ICT sector becomes Egypt’s fastest-growing industry, AI will
further accelerate this momentum."
Cybersecurity and resilience
were front and centre at Cyshield, which demonstrated AI-driven
capabilities designed to protect mission-critical platforms. Mostafa Essa, CIO
of Cyshield, highlighted the strategic importance of the event and the region,
“Ai Everything MEA Egypt plays an instrumental role in Cyshield’s
growth strategy. It reinforces our commitment to delivering AI solutions that
empower people, enhance community experiences, and create meaningful, long-term
social impact.”
Empowerment
for the AI Economy
Alongside technology and policy, skills development
featured throughout the day. AWS training programmes offered hands-on
learning pathways across cloud services, generative AI and emerging
technologies — from AWS Skill Builder to SimuLearn — supporting the talent
needed to operate AI systems at scale.