Hyperfusion, CAMB.AI to bring multilingual voice AI infrastructure to MENA

The platform can be used for tasks ranging from customer service agents and field-ops assistants to media streaming and live commentary. (Supplied)
The platform can be used for tasks ranging from customer service agents and field-ops assistants to media streaming and live commentary. (Supplied)
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Updated 30 September 2025
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Hyperfusion, CAMB.AI to bring multilingual voice AI infrastructure to MENA

Hyperfusion, CAMB.AI to bring multilingual voice AI infrastructure to MENA
  • New platform allows data and workloads to remain in-country, addressing privacy and regulatory concerns

LONDON: Hyperfusion, a UAE-based artificial intelligence cloud provider, and AI-driven speech and translation tech company CAMB.AI announced Tuesday a partnership to offer locally hosted, real-time voice AI and agent services for organizations across the Middle East and North Africa.

The move is the industry’s latest effort to enhance technological sovereignty in the region.

The two companies said the platform brings together CAMB.AI’s speech-to-speech, text-to-speech, and live translation capabilities, now running on Hyperfusion’s GPU cloud in the UAE.

The system supports over 100 languages, including Arabic dialects, and is designed to help businesses and media companies deploy voice agents and broadcast-grade translation tools with low-latency and regional compliance.

Executives said the new partnership allows data and workloads to remain in-country, addressing privacy and regulatory concerns.

Quentin Reyes, CEO of Hyperfusion, said the initiative aims to elevate AI offerings in the region, saying enterprises in the Gulf Cooperation Council region “don’t just want AI — they want trusted, sovereign AI that can power real products.

“With CAMB.AI, we’re giving builders in the region a voice and agent layer that is multilingual, low-latency, and compliant — so they can launch at scale, here.”

Building on CAMB.AI’s MARS7 text-to-speech model, the agent infrastructure offers features like barge-in, multilingual turn-taking, and support for conversational enterprise workflows.

The platform can be used for tasks ranging from customer service agents and field-ops assistants to media streaming and live commentary.

Organizations can access application programming interfaces for real-time workflows, voice controls, and deployment modes ranging from single-tenant to on-prem edge solutions. Monitoring tools provide analytics on latency and usage.

CAMB.AI recently partnered with Arab News to make the newspaper’s content accessible in over 50 languages.

CTO Akshat Prakash said the integration is intended to help regional developers and companies reduce language barriers while maintaining control over data and performance.


Mona Ziade, acclaimed journalist who chronicled Lebanon’s civil war and Arab-Israeli diplomacy, dies at 66

Mona Ziade, acclaimed journalist who chronicled Lebanon’s civil war and Arab-Israeli diplomacy, dies at 66
Updated 04 November 2025
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Mona Ziade, acclaimed journalist who chronicled Lebanon’s civil war and Arab-Israeli diplomacy, dies at 66

Mona Ziade, acclaimed journalist who chronicled Lebanon’s civil war and Arab-Israeli diplomacy, dies at 66
  • She launched her journalism career in Beirut in 1978 before joining the AP there four years later
  • Ziade also closely covered the Palestine Liberation Organization when it was based in Lebanon and later in Tunisia

BEIRUT: Mona Ziade, who helped The Associated Press cover major events out of the Middle East during the 1980s and ‘90s, including the taking of Western hostages during Lebanon’s civil war and Arab-Israeli peace talks, has died. She was 66.
Ziade died Tuesday morning at her home in Beirut from complications of lung cancer after undergoing treatment for months, her daughter Tamara Blanche said. Blanche said that her mother had been unconscious in the hours before she passed away.
Ziade, a dual citizen of Lebanon and Jordan, launched her journalism career with United Press International in Beirut in 1978 before joining the AP four years later.
While covering Lebanon’s 15-year civil war, Ziade’s boss, the AP’s chief Middle East correspondent Terry Anderson, was kidnapped in Beirut in 1985. He was held for seven years, becoming one of the longest-held American hostages in history.
Months after Anderson’s kidnapping, the AP moved its Middle East headquarters from Beirut to Cyprus’ capital, Nicosia. Ziade moved there in 1986 and later married longtime AP correspondent Ed Blanche, who served as the agency’s Middle East editor for 10 years.
Ziade also closely covered the Palestine Liberation Organization when it was based in Lebanon and later in Tunisia, delivering several scoops to the AP through her excellent source work within the group. When the PLO’s chairman, Yasser Arafat, and Israel’s prime minister, Yitzhak Rabin, signed a historic peace accord at the White House in 1993, Ziade was there to cover it.
“Mona was a firecracker, a hard-charging young reporter in an international press corps replete with hard chargers and ambitious journalists,” said Robert H. Reid, the AP’s former Middle East regional editor.
“Her razor’s edge was a longtime friendship with the commander of the Palestine Liberation Organization’s military wing, Abu Jihad, a boyhood friend of her father,” Reid said. “That tie was not only an invaluable source of information from a major player in the Middle East, but also a safety guarantee for AP reporters operating in areas of Lebanon controlled by Abu Jihad’s troops.”
Ziade left the AP in 1996 to resettle with her family back in Beirut. She and Blanche helped relaunch Lebanon’s Daily Star newspaper, which had ceased publishing at the height of the civil war. Ziade served as the English-language daily’s national editor before becoming its managing editor.
She left the Daily Star in 2003 and went to work as a communications officer for the World Bank’s Lebanon office.
Before launching her career, Ziade studied communications and political science at Beirut University College, which is now known as Lebanese American University.
Ed Blanche died in Beirut in 2019 after a long battle with cancer. The couple is survived by their daughter, Tamara, and Ed Blanche’s two sons from a previous marriage, Jay and Lee.