Highlighting the importance of investing in local-language AI (Artificial intelligence) models, UNB Executive Editor Nahar Khan on Sunday said AI can be a tool for progress, but only if people wield it with integrity, inclusivity and foresight.
"The future of news in the Global South will not be written by algorithms alone. It will be written by us, by our choices, by our courage, and by our commitment to truth," she said.
Nahar, also Executive Director of Cosmos Foundation, made the remarks while speaking at a forum titled "The Rise of the Global South: Economic Development and Cultural Confidence" held at the "Global South Media and Think Tank Forum-2025."
She said the Global South has long been spoken about, too rarely spoken for. "AI offers us a chance to change that - but only if we act collectively."
"Let us ensure that our audiences, our languages, and our stories are not left behind in this transformation," Nahar said.
The five-day forum, which opened Saturday, is co-hosted by Xinhua News Agency, the Communist Party of China Yunnan Provincial Committee and the People's Government of Yunnan Province.
Freddy Alfred Niáñez Contreras, Vice President of the Council of Ministers and Minister of Information of Venezuela (video message); Liu Gang, Director-general of Xinhua Institute; Kubatbek Rakhimov, CEO of the Public Foundation Applikata Center for Strategic Solutions of Kyrgyzstan; Wen Jian, Director of the Communication Strategy Center, Xinhua Institute; Erika Hoffmann Jauge, President of the National Public Media of Uruguay; Shakil Ahmed, Chief Executive Officer, Asian Institute of Eco-Civilization Research and Development of Pakistan; Sun Ming, Vice President of the Academy of Contemporary China and World Studies; Li Yuefen, South Centre G20 Sherpa and Senior Advisor on South-South Cooperation and Development Finance; Merthold Macfalle Monyae, Director of the Centre for Africa-China Studies of University of Johannesburg; Hamed Vafaei, Director of the Asian Studies Research Center at the University of Tehran; Selçuk Colakoglu, Founding Director of the Turkish Center for Asia-Pacific Studies; Timofey V. Expert at the Global Fact-Checking Network of Russia; Hou Sheng, Vice President of the Yunnan Academy of Social Sciences, and Moderator: Liu Hua, Director of Communications and Public Affairs, Xinhua Institute, also spoke at the discussion.
Challenge of Voice and Trust
In a rapidly changing information ecosystem, Nahar said, the true test lies in how their voices and perspectives are acknowledged, accurately represented, and valued on the global stage.
At the heart of this is trust, she said, news is only as strong as the credibility it carries, and in the age of AI, that trust is under both great pressure and great possibility.
More and more audiences across the Global South are consuming news in new ways - through platforms, short videos, and increasingly AI-driven feeds and interfaces, Nahar observed.