The Gates Foundation said he won’t be attending to ensure the focus remains on the summit’s key priorities
Published Thu, Feb 19, 2026 · 12:09 PM — Updated Thu, Feb 19, 2026 · 01:11 PM
[NEW DELHI] American billionaire Bill Gates pulled out of India’s AI Impact Summit just hours before his scheduled keynote address on Thursday (Feb 19), dealing another blow to a flagship event already marred by organisational lapses, a robot bungle and delegate complaints over traffic disruptions.
The Gates Foundation said the 70-year-old will not deliver his address in order “to ensure the focus remains on the AI Summit’s key priorities”.
Only days ago, the foundation had dismissed rumours of his absence and insisted he was on track to attend.
Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi spoke at the event in New Delhi on Thursday, which was attended by French President Emmanuel Macron, Google CEO Sundar Pichai, OpenAI CEO Sam Altman and Anthropic CEO Dario Amodei, among others.
Gates’ absence, followed by another high-profile cancellation by Nvidia’s Jensen Huang, adds to a difficult opening for a summit billed as the first major artificial intelligence (AI) forum in the Global South, where India has sought to position itself as a leading voice in global AI governance.
Gates’ cancellation comes after the US Department of Justice released emails last month that included communication between the late financier and convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein and the Gates Foundation’s staff.
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The documents indicated that Gates and Epstein met repeatedly after Epstein’s prison term to discuss expanding Gates’ philanthropic efforts. Gates has said the relationship was confined to philanthropy-related discussions and that it was a mistake for him to meet Epstein.
The Gates Foundation, the philanthropic organisation started by Microsoft co-founder Bill Gates and his then-wife in 2000, is one of the world’s biggest funders of global health initiatives.
Chaos and traffic snarls
India’s first major AI summit has not dominated news headlines for the products on display, but for management lapses that have left attendees shocked and angry over what they described as a lack of planning by the Indian government.
The summit exhibition halls were shut to the public on Thursday in a surprise move that led to more anger among attendees.
On Wednesday, Indian university Galgotias was asked to vacate its stall after a staff member presented a commercially available robotic dog made in China as its own creation.
Chaos has gripped the city, with people on social media complaining of traffic snarls as police shut roads to give preference to VIP movement.
On Wednesday, footage on social media showed scores of attendees at the summit walking for kilometres in central Delhi as roads were shut for traffic, with no availability of taxis and no shuttle services arranged. REUTERS
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