BharatGen Unveils AI News Anchor 'Sutra' at India AI Summit 2026

BharatGen, India's sovereign AI initiative, unveiled the AI-powered news anchor 'Sutra' at the India AI Impact Summit. Developed in collaboration with the India Today Group and MeitY, the multimodal system is designed to process complex discussions into clear narratives for Indian audiences. The initiative emphasizes creating culturally aware AI to ensure inclusive and contextual journalism. Leaders stressed that AI must enhance journalism with transparency, editorial oversight, and accountability.

Key Points: India Unveils AI News Anchor 'Sutra' for Indigenous Journalism

  • AI anchor converts discussions into news
  • Part of sovereign BharatGen LLM initiative
  • Focus on Indian languages and context
  • Aims to enhance, not dilute, journalism
  • Transparency and editorial oversight stressed
2 min read

BharatGen unveils AI-powered news anchor 'Sutra' at India AI Impact Summit

BharatGen and India Today Group launch AI anchor 'Sutra' at India AI Impact Summit, aiming to transform news with culturally-aware, sovereign AI.

"AI must operate with transparency, attribution and accountability. - Kallie Purie"

New Delhi, February 20

BharatGen unveiled an artificial intelligence-powered news anchor named 'Sutra' at the India AI Impact Summit 2026, highlighting the growing role of indigenous AI systems in transforming news delivery and public communication.

The AI anchor was showcased during the summit organised with the support of the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY). Developed as a multimodal AI system, Sutra is capable of processing complex and real-time discussions and converting them into clear, structured news narratives.

BharatGen is India's first government-funded, sovereign, Multimodal Large Language Model (LLM) initiative, designed to create AI tailored for Indian languages and cultural contexts.

The AI-driven anchor has been developed by the India Today Group in collaboration with the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology (MeitY) and BharatGen as part of efforts to integrate advanced artificial intelligence into newsroom operations.

According to the developers, the system demonstrated its capabilities at the summit by synthesising key insights from high-level policy discussions and presenting them in an accessible format, aimed at helping wider audiences better understand technical and policy-related developments.

BharatGen CEO Rishi Bal said, "AI in media cannot be shallow automation. It must understand nuance. By developing culturally aware and home-grown AI capabilities, we are ensuring that Indian journalism remains inclusive, contextual and technologically empowered."

The unveiling comes at a time when news organisations globally are increasingly adopting artificial intelligence to assist with content generation, analysis and dissemination.

Experts at the summit noted that while AI can enhance efficiency and accessibility, maintaining transparency, editorial oversight, and accountability remains critical.

"Our goal is clarity," said Nilanjan Das, Chief AI Officer, India Today Group. "AI must enhance journalism, not dilute it. Through our partnership with BharatGen, we are building systems that are rooted in India's linguistic diversity and aligned with our editorial standards. This is about creating sovereign, responsible AI for news."

The India AI Impact Summit brought together policymakers, technology leaders and industry stakeholders to deliberate on the opportunities and challenges posed by artificial intelligence, particularly in sectors such as media, governance and public communication.

Vice Chairperson and Executive Editor-in-Chief of the India Today Group, Kallie Purie, emphasised the need for transparency and fairness in AI's interaction with journalism. She said, "AI must operate with transparency, attribution and accountability. Verified journalism cannot be treated the same as unverified content, and there must be fairness in how credible news is used and valued."

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Interesting development. But I have concerns. An AI anchor might be efficient, but can it understand the emotional gravity of a tragic event or the nuance of a complex political situation? The human touch in journalism is irreplaceable. Editorial oversight is key, as the article says.
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Vikram M
Finally! News in my mother tongue (Tamil) with proper context and not just a direct translation. If BharatGen can truly capture cultural nuances, it will be a game-changer for regional media. Kudos to the team. The focus on inclusivity is commendable.
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Rohit P
The tech is cool, no doubt. But who is programming the AI's "understanding" of context? We must ensure the data it's trained on is diverse and unbiased. The risk of creating an echo chamber is real if not handled carefully.
S
Sarah B
As someone working in tech, this is impressive. Converting complex policy discussions into accessible narratives for the public is a huge challenge. If Sutra can do this reliably, it could improve civic engagement and understanding across India's diverse population.
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Nikhil C
Good initiative, but I hope this doesn't lead to job losses for journalists and anchors. AI should assist and enhance, not replace. The quote from the India Today Group CAIO is reassuring on this point. Let's see how it's implemented on the ground.

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