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What Islam can contribute to the global AI ethics debate

What Islam can contribute to the global AI ethics debate

What Islam can contribute to the global AI ethics debate
The Arab world must claim its place at the heart of AI ethics — and the world cannot afford for us to stay silent. (SDAIA)
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As Pope Leo XIV works to bridge the growing chasm between technology developers and religious communities, he would do well to look eastward — toward Islam’s rich intellectual tradition that sees no conflict between faith and scientific innovation. And in truth, we would do well to look at ourselves. While many Western tech hubs often treat religion with suspicion, the Arab-Islamic world possesses precisely the ethical architecture needed to guide artificial intelligence toward justice, accountability, and human dignity.

From its very first revelation, Islam made the pursuit of knowledge a sacred duty. The Qur’anic command “Iqra”— “Read!”— enshrined learning as worship. In the House of Wisdom in Baghdad and the observatories of Samarkand, Muslim scholars fused scientific progress with moral responsibility, guided by hikmah (wisdom), ’adl (justice), and raḥmah (compassion). These were not abstract ideals but actionable virtues; la darar wa la dirar — no harm, no reciprocating harm — demands technologies that prevent bias and protect the vulnerable; shura (consultation) ensures inclusive design; and taʿaruf (mutual knowing) bridges cultures instead of dividing them.

Where Silicon Valley wrestles with AI’s ethical dilemmas, Islamic jurisprudence offers clarity through the maqasid Al-Shari’ah — the preservation of life, intellect, dignity, property, religion, and lineage. These objectives align seamlessly with global technical standards while grounding them in a deeper moral and spiritual foundation. And while these principles are rooted in Islam, they resonate with the moral teachings of all Abrahamic faiths and ancient traditions of our region — values of justice, mercy, human dignity, and stewardship that have shaped Arab civilization for centuries. It is these shared values, more than any single creed, that can inspire and guide the ethical governance of AI.

Just as the first Islamic Golden Age united faith and reason to advance the arts and sciences, today’s AI-powered era can usher in a Platinum Islamic Age.

Mona Hamdy

This is not a call to nostalgia but to renewal. Just as the first Islamic Golden Age united faith and reason to advance the arts and sciences, today’s AI-powered era can usher in a Platinum Islamic Age — a renaissance where data, algorithms, and machine intelligence are governed by fairness, transparency, accountability, privacy, human agency, beneficence, non-maleficence, inclusivity, sustainability, and wisdom.

The architecture of the current digital world has been built largely on Western norms. The coming age does not need to inherit these defaults. With our values, language, and ethos, we can help design a future where even in a world of quantum processors and models with trillions of parameters, the human soul remains safeguarded.

This vision is already taking shape. In Ƶ, the Saudi Data and AI Authority’s Islamic Governance Framework for AI — enshrined in the Riyadh Charter on Artificial Intelligence in the Islamic World — sets standards for relevance, flexibility, sustainability, fairness, inclusion, human dignity, and robust oversight. It is more than national policy: It is an exportable global framework. With the Riyadh Charter as its foundation and initiatives such as Humain as its engine, the Kingdom can lead the world toward a future where innovation and integrity advance together.

Our region can once again become the global epicenter of values-driven innovation — convening technologists, policymakers, scholars, and civil society to create enforceable standards, certify ethical systems, advise governments, and train the next generation of innovators in human-centered design. Our AI centers can be the guiding compass of AI ethics, ensuring that we do not lose sight of the truest technological north — reminding the world that the human being, and all wonders of God’s creation, outshine any digital work of our own hands.

The Arab world must claim its place at the heart of AI ethics — and the world cannot afford for us to stay silent. Guided by our shared moral heritage, we can shape a future not ruled by cold machines or fractured societies, but enriched by technologies that uphold dignity, protect the vulnerable, unite communities, and sustain the planet. Let us lead an era where progress is measured not only in speed or scale, but in stewardship, creativity, and the flourishing of all — where Arab minds and hands, driven by wisdom and compassion, direct technology’s purpose and set the course for a world where man and machine grow together in service to humanity.

Dr. Mona Hamdy, PhD, is a teaching fellow of applied ethics at Harvard University and founder of Anomaly.

 

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

Japan’s first female governing-party leader is an ultra-conservative star in a male-dominated group

Japan’s first female governing-party leader is an ultra-conservative star in a male-dominated group
Updated 45 sec ago

Japan’s first female governing-party leader is an ultra-conservative star in a male-dominated group

Japan’s first female governing-party leader is an ultra-conservative star in a male-dominated group
  • Sanae Takaichi, 64. admires former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher
  • She hardly touched on gender issues during the campaign

TOKYO: In a country that ranks poorly internationally for gender equality, the new president of Japan’s long-governing Liberal Democrats, and likely next prime minister, is an ultra-conservative star of a male-dominated party that critics call an obstacle to women’s advancement.
Sanae Takaichi, 64. admires former British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher and is a proponent of former Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s conservative vision for Japan.
Takaichi is the first female president of Japan’s predominantly male ruling party that has dominated Japan’s postwar politics almost without interruption.
She hardly touched on gender issues during the campaign, but on Saturday, as she tried out the party president’s chair and posed for a photo as is customary for the newly elected leader, Takaichi said: ”Now that the LDP has its first female president, its scenery will change a little.”
First elected to parliament from her hometown of Nara in 1993, she has served in key party and government posts, including minister of economic security, internal affairs and gender equality.
Female lawmakers in the conservative Liberal Democratic Party who were given limited ministerial posts have often been shunned as soon as they spoke up about diversity and gender equality. Takaichi has stuck with old-fashioned views favored by male party heavyweights.
Takaichi also admits she is a workaholic who would rather study at home instead of socializing. After unsuccessfully running for party presidency twice in the past, she made efforts to be more sociable to build connections as advised, she said.
But on Saturday, as she called for an all-out effort to rebuild the party and regain public support, she asked all party lawmakers to “work like a horse.” Then she added, “I will abandon the word ‘work-life balance.’ I will work, work, work and work.”
The “work-life balance” quickly trended on social media, triggering mixed reactions — support for her enthusiasm and concern about her work ethic.
Women comprise only about 15 percent of Japan’s lower house, the more powerful of the two parliamentary chambers. Only two of Japan’s 47 prefectural governors are women.
A drummer in a heavy-metal band and a motorbike rider as a student, Takaichi has called for a stronger military, more fiscal spending for growth, promotion of nuclear fusion, cybersecurity and tougher policies on immigration.
She vowed to drastically increase female ministers in her government. But experts say she might actually set back women’s advancement because as leader she would have to show loyalty to influential male heavyweights. If not, she risks a short-lived leadership.
Takaichi has backed financial support for women’s health and fertility treatment as part of the LDP policy of having women serve in their traditional roles of being good mothers and wives. But she also recently acknowledged her struggles with menopausal symptoms and stressed the need to educate men about female health to help women at school and work.
Takaichi supports the imperial family’s male-only succession, opposes same-sex marriage and a revision to the 19th-century civil law that would allow separate surnames for married couples so that women don’t get pressured into abandoning theirs.
She is a wartime history revisionist and China hawk. She regularly visits Yasukuni Shrine, which Japan’s neighbors consider a symbol of militarism, though she has declined to say what she would do as prime minister.
Political watchers say her revisionist views of Japan’s wartime history may complicate ties with Beijing and Seoul.
Her hawkish stance is also a worry for the LDP’s longtime partnership with Komeito, a Buddhist-backed moderate party. While she has said the current coalition is crucial for her party, she says she is open to working with far-right groups.


Indonesia school collapse death toll rises to 36, search for bodies continues

Indonesia school collapse death toll rises to 36, search for bodies continues
Updated 28 min 13 sec ago

Indonesia school collapse death toll rises to 36, search for bodies continues

Indonesia school collapse death toll rises to 36, search for bodies continues
  • Efforts continued for a seventh day to search for the bodies of 27 students still declared missing

JAKARTA: The number of students confirmed dead after the collapse of an Islamic boarding school building in Indonesia rose to 36, from 16 a day earlier, the country's disaster mitigation agency said on Sunday.
Efforts continued for a seventh day to search for the bodies of 27 students still declared missing - mostly teenage boys from the ages of 13 to 19 - trapped under the rubble, the agency said.
Cranes were deployed to excavate debris and search and evacuation efforts were 60% complete, according to the agency, which said it expected to clear all debris and finish the search on Monday.
The Al Khoziny school in the town of Sidoarjo in East Java province caved in last Monday, collapsing on top of hundreds of teenage students during afternoon prayers, its foundations unable to support ongoing construction work on its upper floors.
On Friday, rescuers received the parents' permission to make use of heavy equipment after failing to find signs of life during previous efforts.
Rescuers dug through tunnels in the remains of the building, calling out the boys' names and using sensors to detect any movement, but found no signs of life.
Al Khoziny is an Islamic boarding school known locally as a pesantren.
Indonesia, the world's largest Muslim-majority nation, has about 42,000 pesantren serving 7 million students, according to religious affairs ministry data.


Trump’s ‘paper tiger’ jab at Russia echoes Mao’s propaganda against the US

Trump’s ‘paper tiger’ jab at Russia echoes Mao’s propaganda against the US
Updated 39 min 5 sec ago

Trump’s ‘paper tiger’ jab at Russia echoes Mao’s propaganda against the US

Trump’s ‘paper tiger’ jab at Russia echoes Mao’s propaganda against the US
  • Trump's mocking of Russia’s military powers and calling the country “a paper tiger,” prompted the Kremlin to push back
  • “You’re four years fighting a war that should have taken a week,” Trump said of Russia’s war with Ukraine. “Are you a paper tiger?”

WASHINGTON: Nearly 80 years after Mao Zedong called the United States a “paper tiger” to boost morale at home, US President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin are exchanging barbs who is the paper tiger of today.
In a Sept. 23 post on Truth Social, Trump mocked Russia’s military powers and called the country “a paper tiger,” prompting the Kremlin to push back. Trump backed off, but on Tuesday he brought back the dismissive rhetoric when addressing a roomful of generals and admirals. “You’re four years fighting a war that should have taken a week,” Trump said of Russia’s war with Ukraine. “Are you a paper tiger?”
On Thursday, Putin retorted, “We are fighting against the entire bloc of NATO, and we keep moving, keep advancing and feel confident, and we are a paper tiger; what NATO itself is?”
He added: “A paper tiger? Go and deal with this paper tiger then.”

Russian President Vladimir Putin, center, visits a newly-opened concert hall in Sirius urban-type settlement, Krasnodar Territory, Russia, on Oct. 3, 2025. (Sputnik, Kremlin Pool Photo via AP)

Those familiar with modern Chinese history have found it amusing, odd and not without irony that an American president should be using a classic Chinese propaganda slogan — words that came from the heart of a communist government that is the polar opposite of what the Trump administration frames as the best way to run a country.
“As a Chinese historian I had to laugh at the irony when President Trump appropriated one of Chairman Mao’s favorite expressions in calling Russia a ‘paper tiger,’” said John Delury, a senior fellow at Asia Society.
“Mao famously said this about the United States, at a time when the US had a growing nuclear arsenal and China was not yet a nuclear power. ... How times have changed. Now the leaders of the United States and Russia are calling one another ‘paper tigers’ as Chinese leader Xi Jinping sits back looking like the adult in the room.”
How paper tiger became a propaganda term in China
The phrase — “zhilaohu” in China’s dominant dialect — is well-rooted in the culture of the Chinese Communist Party. Perry Link, a well-known American scholar on modern Chinese language and culture, recalled that Lao She, a famous Chinese writer, referred to US troops as the “paper tiger” during the Korean War years.
“There’s a Cold War echo across this whole story,” said Rana Mitter, a British historian specializing in modern Chinese history.
Accounts by Chinese state media and essays by party theorists say the phrase entered into the party vocabulary when Mao, the founding revolutionary, told the American journalist Anna Louise Strong in a 1946 interview that the atom bomb by the United States was a “paper tiger,” which the “US reactionaries use to scare people.”

China's paramount leader Mao Tse Tung meeting with US Secretary of State Henry Kissing in Beijing on Nov. 24, 1973. (AFP/File)

Mao then used the Chinese phrase “zhilaohu,” which means paper tiger literally. But his interpreter translated it into “scarecrow,” according to state media reports, before an American doctor who was present suggested “paper tiger,” which Mao approved. The phrase largely refers to something that is seemingly powerful but actually fragile.
Delury said at the time that Moscow, which took the nuclear threat seriously, was aghast that Mao “casually” dismissed the threat and was annoyed that “Mao would brazenly use ‘paper tiger’ rhetoric at a time when if nuclear war broke out, China would rely on Russian involvement.”
The term became ‘a sharp thought weapon’ for China
That didn’t happen. Mao seized power in 1949, and the phrase “zhilaohu” became a propaganda staple in communist China, closely associated with western imperialists, particularly the United States. Mao famously said that “all reactionaries are paper tigers.” In canonizing the leader’s wisdom, party theorists have called the slogan Mao’s “strategic thought” and “a sharp thought weapon.”
The rhetoric subsided when US-China ties warmed in the 1970s, but it resurfaced in recent years as bilateral relations chilled.
In April, in the heat of a tariff war between the two countries, a Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson posted on X a Mao quotation from 1964: “The US intimidates certain countries, stopping them from doing business with us. But America is just a paper tiger. Don’t believe its bluff. One poke, and it’ll burst.”
Before Trump borrowed Beijing’s propaganda slogan to mock Russia, the phrase had already seeped into the public discourse in the United States. In a February editorial, Eugene Robinson, a Washington Post columnist, criticized Trump’s foreign policy and compared it to bullying. “Trump’s foreign policy is that of a paper tiger, not a real one,” wrote the columnist, now retired.
And in May, Laurence Tribe, a Harvard University professor, called Trump “a paper tiger” when assuring Harvard’s international students not to be scared by the president’s hostile policy toward foreign students.


Pakistan PM to visit Malaysia today for talks on boosting trade, economic cooperation

Pakistan PM to visit Malaysia today for talks on boosting trade, economic cooperation
Updated 44 min 6 sec ago

Pakistan PM to visit Malaysia today for talks on boosting trade, economic cooperation

Pakistan PM to visit Malaysia today for talks on boosting trade, economic cooperation
  • Shehbaz Sharif will hold talks with Anwar Ibrahim, witness the signing of agreements and MoUs
  • Visit aims to deepen cooperation in trade, IT, halal industry, investment, energy and other sectors

ISLAMABAD: Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif is scheduled to visit Malaysia today, Sunday, to hold talks with his counterpart Anwar Ibrahim and explore ways to deepen cooperation across key economic sectors, according to an official statement.

The visit comes as Pakistan pushes for export-led growth and seeks new markets to recover from a prolonged economic crisis that brought it close to default two years ago.

Last month, Sharif instructed his administration to draw up a plan to boost exports, particularly beef, to Malaysia, noting the “enormous potential” to expand trade between the two countries.

Malaysia is already a major supplier of palm oil to Pakistan, while halal meat remains a largely untapped area of bilateral trade.

“At the invitation of Prime Minister Anwar Ibrahim, Prime Minister Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif will undertake an official visit to Malaysia from 5-7 October 2025,” the foreign office said in a statement released on Saturday. “He will be accompanied by a high-level delegation comprising Deputy Prime Minister/Foreign Minister, Federal Ministers and senior government officials.”

“During the visit, the Prime Minister is scheduled to hold bilateral talks with his Malaysian counterpart as well as discuss key regional and global developments,” it added. “The two leaders will also deliberate on enhancing bilateral cooperation in trade ... IT & telecom, Halal industry, investment, education, energy, infrastructure, digital economy, and people-to-people ties.”

The statement described the visit as reflecting a “strong and enduring strategic partnership” between Pakistan and Malaysia, rooted in mutual respect and shared interests. The two leaders are also expected to witness the signing of several agreements and memorandums of understanding in existing and new areas of cooperation.

“This visit underscores Pakistan’s continued commitment to strengthening ties with Malaysia,” the foreign office said. “It also reaffirms the importance both countries place on working together to promote peace, stability, trade & investment and sustainable development.”

Pakistan and Malaysia established diplomatic ties in 1957, soon after Malaysia’s independence, and cooperate closely in multilateral forums such as the Organization of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) and the Commonwealth.


Israeli army says intercepted missile launched from Yemen

Israeli army says intercepted missile launched from Yemen
Updated 05 October 2025

Israeli army says intercepted missile launched from Yemen

Israeli army says intercepted missile launched from Yemen

JERUSALEM: The Israeli army said on Sunday that it had intercepted a missile fired from Yemen, from where Houthi rebels frequently launch attacks they describe as a response to the Israeli offensive in Gaza.
“Following the sirens that sounded a short while ago in several areas in Israel, a missile launched from Yemen was intercepted by the IAF,” the Israeli Defense Forces said, using an acronym for the air force.
“Sirens were sounded in accordance with protocol,” it said.
The Houthis, who are backed by Iran, regularly send missiles or drones toward Israel, the vast majority of which are shot down.
But last month, a drone attack claimed by the Houthis evaded Israeli air defenses and wounded 22 people in the tourist resort of Eilat.
Israel launched in response strikes on what it described as Houthi-linked targets in the rebel-held Yemeni capital of Sanaa.
The strikes killed at least nine people and wounded more than 170, according to the Houthis.