Fodder cutters are fearsome machines with large round blades spinning at excessive velocity, powered by small turbines. Operated by rural employees in a number of growing international locations, together with India, Pakistan and Kenya, they pose a continuing danger – many have had fingers or arms amputated following accidents.
The results are devastating. Duties that form day by day life – harvesting crops, kneading dough, stitching embroidery – out of the blue develop into inconceivable. Hundreds of ladies are left with lowered independence, misplaced livelihoods, and, too usually, social exclusion.
Till lately, superior prosthetics had been far past their attain. Now, homegrown AI instruments are opening the door to the identical sorts of subtle units obtainable in wealthier international locations.
Karachi-based Bioniks Applied sciences partnered with UN Ladies to design and ship prosthetic limbs tailor-made particularly for affected feminine employees in Pakistan’s Sindh province. The initiative harnessed frontier applied sciences – 3D modelling, digital scanning, and synthetic intelligence – to create light-weight, sturdy, and intuitive bionic arms able to reworking day by day life.

UN Ladies
A rural Pakistani lady injured by a fodder cutter.
“By way of this collaboration, we supplied superior prosthetic arms, hands-on coaching, psychological assist and consciousness periods to assist communities perceive security practices and forestall such accidents sooner or later,” says Ayesha Zulfiqar, co-founder of Bioniks.
“Watching these unimaginable girls regain their mobility, dignity, independence and return handy embroidery, their important supply of revenue, has been profoundly inspiring. That is greater than expertise, it’s restoring hope, confidence and alternative.”
The India AI Affect Summit: A primary for the World South
This initiative is a strong instance of what will be achieved when AI is out there to innovators based mostly within the World South.
Democratising AI is a significant precedence for the United Nations, which is working to make sure that this quickly evolving expertise is developed ethically and advantages folks all over the place.
On the India AI Affect Summit, going down from 16 to twenty February in New Delhi, a number of UN businesses will showcase the initiatives they’re supporting within the nation and throughout growing nations.
The Summit is the primary main occasion of its sort within the World South. Constructing on the momentum of the 2023 AI Security Summit convened by the UK, and the 2025 AI Motion Summit in France, it is going to additionally function UN Secretary‑Basic António Guterres and Amandeep Gill, his Particular Envoy for Digital and Rising Applied sciences.
Chatting with writer and podcaster Anirudh Suri within the run-up to the convention, Mr. Gill stated that the UN is concentrated on bridging the rising ‘AI divide’ (between rich and growing economies, in addition to the wealthy and poor inside international locations) and making AI extra accessible to folks all over the place.
“The focus of financial and technological energy is our largest concern on the United Nations,” stated Mr. Gill. “We’ve seen this story earlier than, throughout earlier industrial revolutions, when those that missed steam energy discovered themselves 50 years behind when it comes to growth. We can not afford to let that occur once more.”
Regardless of the fears he expressed, Mr. Gill pointed to areas which have put plans in place to capitalise on AI and keep away from being left behind. “I see this in Southeast Asia, in lots of components of Africa and in India, the place the federal government is taking the lead, subsidising entry to AI for researchers, builders and smaller corporations.”
Though the AI Affect Summit isn’t a UN occasion, Mr. Gill has been concerned in shaping the agenda and considers it to be an essential second on the trail to worldwide governance. “It’s thrilling to see the deal with bridging the AI divide, constructing capability and involving residents in a democratic strategy to the expertise.”