New Saudi-Pakistan biotech pact seeks to harness AI to repurpose drugs, fight cancer

The screengrab taken from a video recorded on October 29, 2025, shows a researcher working at Precision Medicine Lab at Rehman Medical Institute (RMI) in Pakistan’s northwestern city of Peshawar. (AN Photo)
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Updated 31 October 2025
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New Saudi-Pakistan biotech pact seeks to harness AI to repurpose drugs, fight cancer

  • Novo Genomics, RMI’s Precision Medicine Lab sign MoU to expand genomics and AI research
  • Partnership aims to build biobanks, repurpose drugs and strengthen regional health innovation

PESHAWAR: Saudi Arabia’s Novo Genomics and the Precision Medicine Lab at Rehman Medical Institute (RMI) in Pakistan’s northwestern city of Peshawar have launched the Saudi-Pakistan Biotech Bridge Initiative, a partnership to expand genomics and artificial-intelligence-based research aimed at combating cancer and other major diseases.

Signed in Riyadh last month, the memorandum of understanding was inked by Novo Genomics CEO Dr. Abdulelah Al-Hawsawi and Dr. Faisal Khan, director of RMI’s Precision Medicine Lab. Both institutions operate with government backing, Novo Genomics through Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Health and RMI’s lab under Pakistan’s federally funded Planning Commission program.

Under the agreement, researchers will develop cross-border biobanks, carry out joint clinical studies and use AI to predict and prevent diseases. The initiative also includes academic exchanges and joint conferences to train young scientists and strengthen regional biotechnology expertise.

Dr. Khan, who is leading the project in Pakistan, said the accord followed months of discussion. 

“We’ve been having conversations with Novo Genomics in Saudi Arabia, one of the leading startups in precision medicine, and that has matured into an MoU … which we are calling the Saudi-Pakistan Biotech Bridge,” he told Arab News. 

“This is a gateway now for us to exchange our latest research and ideas and our prototypes, as well as talent from both sides, which is again very important for any research enterprise.”

He said the collaboration would allow both sides to study their populations’ genetic makeup and accelerate progress in precision medicine:

“Novo Genomics has good know-how of their population, we have a good understanding of ours and this will really speed up our R&D efforts in this space of medicine.”

Khan added that the partnership supports both nations’ technology-driven economic goals:

“Saudi Arabia is now interested in technology-driven non-oil sectors which can bring in revenue. Pakistan … is looking to catapult its economy through technology. There’s no better tool to undertake this than using AI.”

Calling the project a “win-win scenario,” he said it came at a pivotal time in bilateral relations: 

“We’ve had traditional collaborations in traditional sectors like defense, Hajj and Umrah maybe, but we never saw biotechnology. We are very proud that this is happening now. Biotech and synthetic biology are expected to be a $30 trillion industry by 2040, and for Saudi Arabia and Pakistan to join hands and have a piece of that can really go far.”

AI-DRIVEN DRUG REPURPOSING 

A key focus of the collaboration is applying artificial intelligence to drug repurposing, which is identifying new therapeutic uses for existing medicines.

“One leg of our project is drug repurposing, where we use AI to see what drugs created for one specific disease can actually be used for another kind of disease,” said Syed Tauheed Ahmad, 26, a research assistant at RMI’s lab. 

“We’d like to use AI to see what parameters match between populations and the chemical profiles of drugs that might allow us to use or repurpose them in cancers that are more prevalent in Pakistan and maybe Saudi Arabia.”

He added that the lab’s AI models could eventually generate drug candidates tailored to each country’s population. 

“For the first time, we can now give Saudi Arabia drug repurposing candidates that might be better suited for their population because our model makes suggestions based on the genomic and profile data of their population.”

Among the RMI team’s major research areas is oral cancer, one of Pakistan’s most common cancers. The lab has spent years developing what Dr. Khan described as a “multi-omic stack,” a comprehensive database combining genetic, molecular and biological information from local patients. 

“We have banked all the biological samples which come with it, including cell lines for each patient. This really becomes a nice experimental playground to test what’s happening inside the population,” he said.

Wajid Khan, another researcher at RMI, said the project would help both nations better understand how genetic variations shape disease risk. 

“Different populations have different risks for developing certain diseases,” he said. “If we could do something before even the disease onset, then I think that’s a fair chance for all the patients who could be developing the disease in the future to mitigate or to alleviate the risk of the disease.”

In a statement, Dr. Abdulelah Al-Hawsawi, CEO of Novo Genomics, said the partnership “represents an important step towards building a regional genomic ecosystem that serves patients, researchers and industry.”

 


Pakistan defense minister warns of ‘more legal action’ against ex-spy chief

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Pakistan defense minister warns of ‘more legal action’ against ex-spy chief

  • Faiz Hameed, ISI’s director-general from 2019-2021, was sentenced to 14 years by military court this week
  • Defense Minister Khawaja Asif alleges Hameed planned violent priotests led by ex-PM Khan’s party in 2023

ISLAMABAD: Defense Minister Khawaja Asif on Saturday announced “more legal action” will be taken against former spy chief Faiz Hameed, days after he was sentenced to 14 years in prison by a military court. 

Pakistan military’s media wing announced this week that Hameed, who was the director-general of the Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI) from 2019 to 2021, has been sentenced to 14 years after being found guilty of misusing authority and government resources, violating the Official Secrets Act and causing “wrongful loss to persons.”

The former spy chief was widely seen as close to ex-prime minister Imran Khan. Hameed, who retired from the army in December 2022, is accused by the ruling Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) party of Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif of bringing down the government of his elder brother, Nawaz Sharif, in 2017. 

The PML-N alleges Hameed worked with then opposition leader Khan to plot Nawaz’s ouster through a series of court cases, culminating in the Supreme Court disqualifying of him from office in 2017 for failing to disclose income and ordering a criminal investigation into his family over corruption allegations. Khan’s party and Hameed have both denied the allegations. 

“A senior officer and former head of the ISI has been convicted in a trial that lasted for a long period of 15 months,” Asif told reporters in Sialkot. 

“There are more problems, charges on which legal action will be taken and that won’t take long.”

Asif repeated the PML-N’s allegations, accusing Hameed of having Nawaz disqualified through the court cases. He accused the former spy chief of propelling Khan to the office of the prime minister, blaming him for having leaders and supporters of the PML-N arrested during Khan’s premiership. 

Pakistan military said this week that Faiz’s alleged role in “fomenting vested political agitation and instability in cahoots with political elements” was being handled separately. Many interpreted this as the military alluding to the May 9, 2023, nationwide unrest, when angry Khan supporters took to the streets and attacked military and government installations after he was briefly detained on corruption charges. 

Asif said Faiz’s “brain and planning” was behind the May 2023 unrest. 

“These two personalities can not be separated,” the defense minister said, referencing Khan and Hameed. 

Senior military officers are rarely investigated or convicted in Pakistan, where the security establishment plays an outsized role in politics and national governance. 

Hameed’s sentencing comes just days after Field Marshal Syed Asim Munir was appointed as Pakistan’s first chief of defense forces, marking a major restructuring of the military command.

Former prime minister Khan’s PTI party has distanced itself from Hameed’s conviction, referring to it as an “internal matter of the military institution.”