Cairo – Ai Everything MEA Egypt 2026 opened in Cairo yesterday, drawing more than 350 AI enterprises and startups from over 30 countries alongside investors, ministers, and industry leaders for the first day of discussions focused on national-scale AI infrastructure.
The inaugural edition was held under the patronage of President Abdel Fattah El-Sisi and hosted by Egypt’s Ministry of Communications and Information Technology in partnership with the Information Technology Industry Development Agency.
From the outset, conversations centered on sovereign AI and the systems required to support it, including data governance, computer architecture, energy demand, and public trust. Across stages and exhibition halls, speakers presented AI as a core layer of national infrastructure, comparable to telecommunications and financial systems.
The Sovereign AI Summit formed the backbone of the opening day. Ruchir Puri, Chief Scientist and Vice President at IBM, addressed questions surrounding national ownership of data and long-term AI architecture.
He emphasized that sovereignty is not solely about infrastructure partnerships but about visibility and control over applications and data. “Data is one of the most critical and underappreciated aspects; data is the sovereign core,” he said.
Government officials from Comoros, Palestine, and Saudi Arabia joined a high-level discussion examining how countries with different economic and political conditions are approaching AI deployment. Panelists addressed the balance between expanding state capacity and ensuring governance, ethics, and responsible oversight.
Human-Centric AI and Real-World Deployment
The summit also raised and addressed questions of responsibility and alignment. Margaret Mitchell, Chief Ethics Scientist at Hugging Face, challenged assumptions that large-scale AI systems can be universally aligned without reflecting local context and priorities.
She argued that general-purpose models often overlook cultural nuance and national considerations.
On the exhibition floor, companies presented applied AI systems already in deployment. Telecom operator e& showcased AI-enabled platforms spanning healthcare, education, and enterprise services.
Cisco demonstrated secure AI infrastructure and edge intelligence capabilities, while Microsoft highlighted AI tools supporting government and industry transformation.
Infrastructure and energy efficiency remained recurring themes. HPE outlined systems designed for enterprise and national workloads, linking AI adoption to economic growth.
“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,” said Mohamed Wasfy, HPE’s Country Manager.
Cybersecurity firm Cyshield presented AI-driven security tools aimed at protecting mission-critical systems. “Ai Everything MEA Egypt plays an instrumental role in Cyshield’s growth strategy,” said Mostafa Essa, CIO of Cyshield.
Skills development also featured throughout the day, with AWS promoting training programs focused on cloud services and generative AI to support workforce readiness.
As the first day concluded, discussions consistently returned to infrastructure, governance, and long-term capacity. The summit continues today, with further sessions examining national strategies, enterprise deployment, and regional collaboration in AI.
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