CEO of Dubai Future Foundation proposes new method of measuring national progress

Dubai Future Foundation CEO Khalfan Belhoul propounded the measure of national progress by looking at cognitive potential. (AN photo)
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Updated 19 November 2025
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CEO of Dubai Future Foundation proposes new method of measuring national progress

  • Dubai Future Foundation CEO Khalfan Belhoul proposes new criteria
  • Expertise will be determined by those who can analyze vast data sets

DUBAI: A measure of national progress measured by cognitive potential was proposed by CEO of Dubai Future Foundation Khalfan Belhoul at the Dubai Future Summit in Dubai on Tuesday.

“What if a nation’s most valuable asset is the focused and interconnected minds of people?” he said kicking off the two day summit.

“National cognitive potential is a measure of national progress by looking at cognitive potential. A new way to understand value in an AI age,” he said.

Belhoul said he predicts the shifts will be in regards to cognitive thinking skills, extracting information and human connection.

“Focus is not about productivity only but it's about thinking deeply. How do we protect deep focus and make it visible so that it's valuable?” said Belhoul.

Belhoul said with the overwhelming access to information that we are getting from generative AI, in the future, everyone and no one will be an expert.

“The future expert is not the one with the most access to information but it will be the one who can extract the most from it,” he explained.

With generative AI becoming a substitute to human connection and relationships, people are relying on these technologies for comfort and it's changing the way humans connect, explained Belhoul.

“AI is changing what a best friend means. How will we redefine human communication, especially when feeling misunderstood can be resolved within seconds,” he said.

Referring to last year’s summit, Belhoul highlighted seven areas in which experts expected humans would likely make progress.

This includes the world moving away from looking at gross domestic product as a measure of a country’s value, doubling energy sourced from the sun, humans returning to the moon, and a genome bank with 1 million samples.

Other areas include 1 million students learning outside of school, the first computer chip implanted in the brain of a healthy person, and the first AI board member of a Fortune 500 company.

Belhoul said three of those forecasts have come true including moving beyond GDP, doubling our energy sourced from the sun, and a clear change in education delivery methods globally.

The other forecasts were on track. “The moon mission is growing, but we are not there yet. Our first mission is scheduled for February 2026,” he said.

“Genome bank is not there yet, but we are close. India, UK and UAE are leading with big number samples and we are set to reach that goal soon,” added Belhoul.

As for implanting the first computer chip in the brain of a healthy person and having an AI board member at a Fortune 500 company, Belhoul said studies were advancing and humanity was getting closer to achieving these goals.


Drone strike in southern Sudan kills 6 UN peacekeepers

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Drone strike in southern Sudan kills 6 UN peacekeepers

  • UNISFA said “six troops were killed and six injured,” including four seriously, when a drone hit their camp in Kadugli
  • Bangladesh’s interim leader Muhammad Yunus said in a statement that he was “deeply saddened“

PORT SUDAN: Six United Nations peacekeepers from Bangladesh were killed on Saturday in a drone strike on Sudan’s southern Kordofan region, the UN mission said, with Dhaka sharply condemning the attack.
The United Nations Interim Security Force for Abyei (UNISFA) said “six troops were killed and six injured,” including four seriously, when a drone hit their camp in Kadugli, the capital of South Kordofan state.
All the victims are from Bangladesh, it said.
Bangladesh’s interim leader Muhammad Yunus said in a statement that he was “deeply saddened” by the attack, putting the toll at six dead and eight wounded.
He asked the UN to ensure that his country’s personnel were offered “any necessary emergency support.”
“The government of Bangladesh will stand by the families in this difficult moment,” he added.
Dhaka’s foreign ministry said it “strongly condemned” the attack.
A medical source had earlier told AFP that the strike on a United Nations facility in Kadugli killed at least six people, with witnesses saying they were UN employees.
“Six people were killed in a bombing of the UN headquarters while they were inside the building,” the medical source at the city’s hospital said.
Eyewitnesses said a drone had struck the UN facility.
The army-aligned government based in Port Sudan issued a statement condemning the attack and accusing the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF) of being behind it.
In a statement, the Sovereignty Council headed by army chief General Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan called the attack a “dangerous escalation.”
Kadugli, where famine was declared in early November, has been besieged for a year and a half by the RSF.
Following their late-October capture of El-Fasher — the army’s last stronghold in Sudan’s western Darfur region — the RSF have pushed eastward into the oil-rich Kordofan region, divided into three states.
Kordofan is a vast agricultural region that lies between RSF-controlled Darfur in the west and army-held areas in the north, east and center.
Its position is important for maintaining supply lines and moving troops.
The RSF has been at war with the military since April 2023 and has deployed fighters, drones and allied militias to the fertile region.
Analysts say the RSF seek to punch through the army’s defenses around central Sudan, paving the way for recapturing Khartoum.
Last week, strikes on a kindergarten and hospital in Kalogi in South Kordofan killed 114 people, including 63 children, according to the UN’s World Health Organization.
Sudan’s war has so far killed tens of thousands of people, displaced millions and resulted in one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises.
Efforts to end the war have so far failed.
Last month, US President Donald Trump said he would move to end the conflict following discussions in Washington with Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, but the initiative has yet to materialize.