If we must build with machines, let’s do so with heart

If we must build with machines, let’s do so with heart

If we must build with machines, let’s do so with heart
A humanoid robot called Tiangong demonstrates its skills at the Robot World exhibition center in Beijing, April 17, 2025. (AFP)
Short Url

Beneath the timeless skies of Diriyah, where history whispers through ancient walls, a new chapter unfolded last week, as reported by the Techville Gazette.

The second World With Purpose KSA event took place at the Bab Samhan Hotel, bringing together family business leaders, visionaries, innovators and change-makers from around the world.

With the theme “Building Legacies. Empowering Families. Creating Global Prosperity,” the summit set its sights high — not merely to discuss the future, but to shape it.

Aristotle once said, “The end of labor is to gain leisure,” but on this occasion, leisure meant more than rest — it was reflection: A purposeful gathering to envision a future where prosperity is rooted in meaning.

The summit centered around six foundational themes: Enabling Global Prosperity: Money with Meaning; Leadership Evolution: Conscious Minds in Business; Next-Gen Impact: Equipping Future Leaders; The Power of AI: Scaling Purpose with Technology; Investing in Future Innovation; and Unveiling Power: Women Redefining Narratives.

Each session echoed a powerful truth: Technological and economic progress must be guided by moral imagination and humanistic values. The world doesn’t just need richer companies — it needs richer souls.

As Roberta Calarese, founder of World With Purpose, said in her opening remarks: “We are here not just to adapt to change, but to humanize it.”

Among the polished keynotes and expert-led masterclasses, session three — AI for Purpose — emerged as an unexpected emblem of the summit’s spirit: Serious, ambitious and delightfully human.

The morning session promised a visionary dive into AI’s potential in fostering global prosperity, featuring speakers such as Prof. De Kai (Berkeley University), Stacey Lawson (Benevolent AI Future), and Bolor-Erdene Battsengel (strategy adviser at SpaceX).

Their shared mission: To explore how machine learning can align with inner human development and ethical principles.

The stage was set for depth and gravitas — but reality had its own twist.

Midway through De Kai’s impassioned argument that AI must “honor the dignity and complexity of the human spirit,” a live audience sentiment tool — designed to generate inspirational quotes — went spectacularly off-script.

Instead of a profound insight, the giant screen flashed: “Trust me, I’m unbiased! — Definitely Not a Robot.”

The room, filled with dignitaries, investors and entrepreneurs, erupted in laughter.

Lawson quipped from her seat: “Well, at least it’s honest about lying!”

Battsengel added: “That’s the most human thing a machine could do — mess up in public!”

It was a moment Socrates himself might have appreciated: “The only true wisdom is in knowing you know nothing.”

And here, even a cheeky AI glitch served as a reminder — humility must accompany innovation.

Behind the humor, however, lay reflections that defined the day.

The world doesn’t just need richer companies — it needs richer souls.

Rafael Hernandez de Santiago

Stacey Lawson challenged the audience with a powerful assertion: “The real frontier in AI ethics isn’t better code — it’s better human leadership.”

She argued that technology amplifies the values — or the void — within its creators. Without leaders committed to personal growth, empathy and a higher purpose, no technical innovation can guarantee ethical outcomes.

She called for a new kind of leadership evolution — one where inner development is not an afterthought, but the foundation. “We must cultivate wisdom before we cultivate power,” she urged.

Her call echoed Confucius’ timeless warning: “To see what is right and not do it is want of courage.”

Battsengel built on this, reminding the room that the true measure of AI’s success would be inclusion and access. “We must ensure AI creates prosperity for all — not just a privileged few,” she said passionately.

In a world teetering between dazzling innovation and deepening inequality, Battsengel’s appeal for ethical frameworks, global cooperation and grassroots empowerment struck a resonant chord.

She added: “AI must not be the latest empire; it must be the newest commons.”

Her vision cast technology as a shared global resource — nurturing education, healthcare and opportunity, especially in underserved regions.

If the future is a garden, then it demands not only innovation, but cultivation. Or as Marcus Aurelius once wrote: “What we do now echoes in eternity.”

Throughout the week, sessions spanned a broad spectrum of urgent themes: Geopolitics and wealth redistribution, next-generation investment strategies, the evolving role of family businesses, and sustainable growth models for the future.

What united these conversations was a growing realization: Purpose is no longer a luxury. In a fragmented, fast-changing world, aligning strategy with values is not just ethical — it is essential for survival.

As one panelist put it during a spirited debate on regional investments: “You can either lead with purpose, or be disrupted by those who do.”

As the sun dipped below Diriyah’s ochre skyline, participants exchanged panel rooms for candlelight at a gala dinner hosted at the Bab Samhan Hotel — a UNESCO World Heritage site where echoes of the past seemed to bless the ambitions of the future.

The evening celebrated ’s rich culinary heritage with a focus on sustainability. But it was not just a feast — it was a story told through flavor: Lamb ouzi slow-cooked to perfection, dates from centuries-old groves, and fragrant dishes that spoke of resilience, culture and reinvention.

The night included a touching screening of “The Night Before Eid” and an immersive AI-art emotional experience designed by technology expert Dr. Angelo Dalli.

It also honored exceptional women through the Women With Purpose Awards, recognizing leaders who are reshaping industries and rewriting the global leadership narrative.

As stars shimmered across the Arabian night, a quiet consensus emerged: World With Purpose was more than a summit — it was a manifesto for the future.

Or, as Leonardo da Vinci once said: “Where the spirit does not work with the hand, there is no art.”

And here in Techville, the spirit is indeed working — and the future may yet be a masterpiece.

And if that future arrives with a little AI mischief along the way?

All the better — a gentle reminder that if we must build with machines, let us do so with heart … and a touch of humor.

Rafael Hernandez de Santiago, viscount of Espes, is a Spanish national living in and working at the Gulf Research Center.
 

Disclaimer: Views expressed by writers in this section are their own and do not necessarily reflect Arab News' point of view

Sarkozy conviction exposes political divide in crisis-hit France

Updated 3 sec ago

Sarkozy conviction exposes political divide in crisis-hit France

Sarkozy conviction exposes political divide in crisis-hit France
The conviction comes at a deeply sensitive moment, with France in political deadlock and the far-right sensing its best ever chance to come to power
Henri Guaino, a former special adviser to Sarkozy, called the conviction “a humiliation for the state and its institutions“

PARIS: The dramatic decision to send former president Nicolas Sarkozy to prison for criminal conspiracy has laid bare France’s stark political divisions, with the move cheered by the left but slammed by the ascendant right.
Sarkozy, seen as a mentor to many conservative politicians, was convicted on Thursday over a scheme enabling late Libyan dictator Muammar Qaddafi to fund his 2007 presidential run.
He must serve his sentence while awaiting the outcome of his appeal, and will be the first French postwar leader to serve jail time.
The conviction comes at a deeply sensitive moment, with France in political deadlock and the far-right sensing its best ever chance to come to power.
Speaking to broadcaster RTL, Henri Guaino, a former special adviser to Sarkozy, called the conviction “a humiliation for the state and its institutions.”
Guaino urged President Emmanuel Macron to pardon Sarkozy, who was president of France from 2007 to 2012, allowing him to avoid prison.
There was no immediate reaction from Macron’s office.
Despite his legal troubles, Sarkozy still enjoys considerable influence and popularity on the French right and has on occasion had private meetings with Macron.

- ‘It’s Nicolas who pays’ -

In an editorial, conservative French daily Le Figaro denounced the court ruling as “absurd and incomprehensible,” claiming there was no “tangible evidence” of Sarkozy’s wrong-doing.
Left-leaning Liberation featured Sarkozy’s face on its front page, with the words “The slammer” printed over it.
Far-right leader Marine Le Pen, who has herself been convicted of embezzlement and insists she is a target of a “witch hunt,” criticized Thursday’s ruling.
She argued on X that the use of provisional enforcement represented “a great danger, in view of the fundamental principles of our law, foremost among which is the presumption of innocence.”
In France, provisional enforcement means that a judicial decision will be implemented even as the appeals process plays out.
Le Pen drew parallels between her own case — which saw her banned from standing for office for five years, scuppering her chances of running in France’s 2027 presidential election unless she wins her appeal — and that of Sarkozy.
“A number of magistrates have a kind of scorecard where they try to pin down as many politicians as possible,” she told broadcaster LCI.
But some on the left expressed their satisfaction.
“In the end, it’s Nicolas who pays,” quipped hard-left lawmaker Anais Belouassa-Cherifi, referring to a right-wing viral meme denouncing the tax burden on ordinary French people.
But Liberation daily said it did not see the conviction as a cause for celebration.
In an editorial, the newspaper said Sarkozy’s case as well as various other political scandals only serve to widen the gap between the French people and the elites.
There is “only one winner in the long run: the far right.”
The court ordered that Sarkozy should be placed in custody at a later date, with prosecutors to inform him on October 13 when he should go to prison.
He has already been convicted in two separate trials but always avoided jail.

Pakistan, Russia conduct counter-terror exercise focusing on drone warfare

Pakistan, Russia conduct counter-terror exercise focusing on drone warfare
Updated 36 min 40 sec ago

Pakistan, Russia conduct counter-terror exercise focusing on drone warfare

Pakistan, Russia conduct counter-terror exercise focusing on drone warfare
  • The development comes as militants in Pakistan have started using quadcopter drones to drop bombs on security forces
  • It also follows a four-day conflict between Pakistan, India in May that saw the large-scale use of unmanned aerial systems

KARACHI: Pakistan and Russia have been conducting a joint military exercise that focuses on drone warfare among other things, the Pakistani military said on Friday.

The development comes as militants in Pakistan have started using commercially acquired quadcopter drones to drop bombs on security forces in the country’s northwest, police say, in a potentially dangerous development in the volatile region.

It also follows a four-day conflict between Pakistan and India in May that saw the large-scale use of unmanned aerial systems (UAS), fighter jets and artillery, leaving nearly 70 people dead on both sides.

Pakistan and Russia have been conducting the Druzhba-VIII exercise from Sept. 15 till Sept. 27, with senior military officials from Russia in attendance, according to the Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), the Pakistani military’s media arm.

“The exercise was aimed at refining the drills, procedures and techniques involved in Counter Terrorism operations with focus on drone warfare, fighting in built-up areas and counter improvised explosive devices through joint training, besides harnessing the historic military to military relations among the friendly countries,” the ISPR said in a statement.

Pakistan and Russia, once Cold War rivals, have warmed up to each other in recent years through regular political, business, trade and defense interactions. In March, a Russian navy flotilla arrived in the southern Pakistani port city of Karachi to conduct joint exercises with Pakistan Navy.

The latest exercise comes ahead of the Indian military’s plans to test drone and counter drone systems next month in a major exercise to toughen its air defenses, Reuters reported this week, citing a senior officer.

Since the four-day clash, both neighboring countries have ramped up drone development in what analysts describe as a drone arms race. India has also announced plans to build an indigenous air defense system, dubbed ‘Sudarshan Chakra’, by 2035 — an initiative officials have likened to Israel’s ‘Iron Dome’.


Israel claims it broadcast Netanyahu UN speech through Gaza residents' mobile phones

Israel claims it broadcast Netanyahu UN speech through Gaza residents' mobile phones
Updated 22 min ago

Israel claims it broadcast Netanyahu UN speech through Gaza residents' mobile phones

Israel claims it broadcast Netanyahu UN speech through Gaza residents' mobile phones

JERUSALEM: The Israeli army took over the mobile phones of Gaza residents to broadcast Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's UN speech live, his office said.

In an “unprecedented operation," the prime minister's office said the Israeli army had taken over the mobile phones of Gaza residents and Hamas operatives and his speech would be broadcast live through the mobile devices.

It was not immediately clear if that happened, or to what extent.

The military also set up loudspeakers at the Israel-Gaza border to blast his words into the territory.


French niece of militant propagandists offers ‘apologies’ to victims

French niece of militant propagandists offers ‘apologies’ to victims
Updated 45 min 32 sec ago

French niece of militant propagandists offers ‘apologies’ to victims

French niece of militant propagandists offers ‘apologies’ to victims
  • Speaking in court on Friday, Jennyfer Clain, a niece of Jean-Michel and Fabien Clain offered her “apologies” to all “direct and indirect victims” of the militants
  • “I am not asking them to forgive me, it is unforgivable, but I offer them my deepest and most sincere apologies,” she said

PARIS: A niece of a notorious militant propagandists on trial for joining the Daesh group and taking her children with her apologized to all victims of the militants as well as her family.
Speaking in court on Friday, Jennyfer Clain, a niece of Jean-Michel and Fabien Clain, who publicly claimed responsibility on behalf of Daesh for the Paris attacks on November 13, 2015, offered her “apologies” to all “direct and indirect victims” of the militants, “in France, Syria, Iraq and elsewhere.”
During the worst attack on Paris since World War II, militant gunmen and suicide bombers killed 130 people at the Bataclan concert hall and elsewhere.
The Clain brothers are presumed to have died during the military campaign launched by US-backed Kurdish groups to defeat IS. In 2022, they were sentenced in absentia to life imprisonment without parole.
“I am not asking them to forgive me, it is unforgivable, but I offer them my deepest and most sincere apologies,” she said, referring to the victims.
Jennyfer Clain and two other French women went on trial in Paris last week, accused of traveling to the Middle East to join the Daesh group.
Jennyfer Clain went to the Middle East with four children, and her fifth baby was born in Raqqa, the Daesh group’s one time capital.
The two other women on trial are Jennyfer Clain’s sister-in-law, Mayalen Duhart, 42, and 67-year-old Christine Allain, the women’s mother-in-law.
Duhart brought her four children with her, and had a baby there, who died at seven months.
Weeping in court, Jennyfer Clain asked her five children, who have been placed in foster care since their return to France in 2019, for “forgiveness.”
“I am sorry for everything they have been through because of me,” she said. “I have failed in my role as a mother,” said the 34-year-old, who is also on trial for abandoning minors.
A representative of the National Anti-Terrorism Prosecutor’s Office has requested a 13-year prison sentence for her.
Duhart also sobbed in court.
Released on parole, she said that a return to prison would be a “disaster” for her children, who have also been placed in foster care.
Prosecutors requested a 10-year prison sentence for Duhart.
“I am not a victim,” she said. “The victims are the others, those who were tortured and massacred by the organization I belonged to. I am responsible.”
Earlier this week the presiding judge had pointed out to the three women that they had not said anything about “the victims of the attacks.”
Allain said that she had been “touched” by her meeting in prison with Georges Salines, the father of Lola Salines, one of the victims killed at the Bataclan.
Prosecutors have requested a 15-year prison sentence for her.
The verdict is expected later Friday.


’We are not afraid,’ jailed Istanbul mayor tells court

’We are not afraid,’ jailed Istanbul mayor tells court
Updated 54 min 54 sec ago

’We are not afraid,’ jailed Istanbul mayor tells court

’We are not afraid,’ jailed Istanbul mayor tells court
  • Prosecutors called for Imamoglu to face up to four years behind bars in that particular case and be subjected to a political ban
  • Imamoglu dismissed the charges as politically motivated and described the case against him as driven by fear at the highest levels of power

SILIVRI, Türkiye: Istanbul’s jailed opposition mayor said Friday that he was “not afraid” as he denounced the legal case against him as part of a broader campaign of “judicial harassment,” accusing the government of weaponizing the judiciary to silence dissent.
Ekrem Imamoglu, a key rival to Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, appeared in court on charges of allegedly seeking to influence a fair trial, one of several cases brought against him.
Prosecutors called for Imamoglu to face up to four years behind bars in that particular case and be subjected to a political ban.
Speaking from a courtroom in Silivri on the western outskirts of Istanbul, where Imamoglu has been held since March, he dismissed the charges as politically motivated and described the case against him as driven by fear at the highest levels of power.
“This is called ‘Ekrem fear’,” he said, addressing the judge directly. “People love me — but one person, clearly, is afraid,” he added, in a reference to Erdogan.
“They see us as a threat — they are afraid of the name Ekrem Imamoglu.”
Imamoglu, 54, is on trial over remarks he made at a January press conference about a single court-appointed expert witness involved in cases against towns and cities run by his opposition CHP party.
The trial is one of several investigations targeting Imamoglu, the CHP’s candidate for the 2028 presidential election, but it is not connected to the graft probe that led to his arrest in March, which sparked Turkiye’s worst street protests in over a decade.
While Imamoglu faces the most high-profile legal battle, his CHP party is also under mounting pressure, with a wave of arrests and legal challenges aimed at its leadership.
“Turkiye is facing a regime and a president that instrumentalize the judiciary to eliminate dissidents and those who think differently — through pre-dawn operations and arbitrary detentions,” Imamoglu told the judge.
“I will fight against them. For the past 11 months, we have been subjected to operations driven by a mindset that controls the judiciary from Ankara,” he said, referring to Erdogan’s government.
But Imamoglu said he would remain defiant.
“They are attacking the CHP, trying to shut it down, using the judiciary as a tool. Let them attack. We are not afraid, and we will not be afraid,” he said.
“Every system built on injustice has collapsed, and this one will collapse too. I trust in this nation.”
Imamoglu’s wife, Dilek Kaya, and other party members were at the hearing to support the mayor.
CHP leader Ozgur Ozel accused the judiciary of attempting to sideline the party’s presidential hopeful through a barrage of trials.
“All of these trials aim at keeping our presidential candidate in prison,” he told journalists after the hearing.
The judge said the next hearing was scheduled for December 12, an AFP journalist inside the court reported.

-’President Imamoglu!’-

Imamoglu walked into the courtroom with a standing ovation and applause from the ranks of defense lawyers, party supporters and the audience, many shouting “President Imamoglu!“
With dossiers in hand, Imamoglu waved at the audience.
In relation to Friday’s trial, Imamoglu’s office said that although Istanbul has 8,806 registered expert witnesses, the same individual was appointed to 24 separate cases involving CHP municipalities.
They described the statistical likelihood of this as “zero,” which they said raised concerns over judicial impartiality.
In court, Imamoglu denounced it as “a case with no solid basis at all.”
In his defense, Imamoglu also referred to Erdogan’s meeting on Thursday at the White House with US President Donald Trump, who thanked the Turkish leader for helping secure the release of a US pastor in 2018.
He said this was a clear example of how Erdogan’s government uses the judiciary as a tool and added this should profoundly sadden “every member of the esteemed judiciary.”
“Has history ever recorded a more direct intervention than this?” he said.
At the White House, Trump welcomed Erdogan with a quip, saying the Turkish leader “knows about rigged elections better than anybody.”