INSEAD Day 4 - 728x90

2PointZero posts profit surge

Growth driven by merger consolidation.

Mashreq Q1 profit rises

Total revenue increased 10% year-on-year.

TECOM profit climbs

High occupancy across assets boosts earnings.

Emirates Stallions Q1 revenue up 11%

The rise helped by strong demand in real estate

ADNOC Distribution 2025 dividend $700m

The company had reported EBITDA of $1.17 bn in 2025.

Qadi partners with Core42 to power sovereign AI compliance platform

Mohamad Al Cherif, founder of Qadi.
  • Qadi’s AI agents automate regulatory compliance by translating local laws into workflows embedded directly within enterprise operations.
  • Core42’s sovereign cloud ensures sensitive legal data remains protected under UAE jurisdictional controls and enterprise-grade governance frameworks.

Qadi, the Middle East’s first sovereign regulatory compliance platform, has partnered with Core42, a G42 company, to power its artificial intelligence infrastructure as it scales operations following a pre-seed funding round.

The partnership will see Qadi run its workloads on Core42’s Sovereign Public Cloud, built on Microsoft Azure, ensuring full UAE data residency and jurisdictional compliance. The move targets legal, regulatory and institutional clients operating in highly sensitive environments across the Middle East, North Africa and Turkey.

Founded to automate regulatory compliance, Qadi converts local laws, regulations and internal policies into AI agents capable of making compliance determinations directly within business workflows. The platform is designed to replace fragmented legal tools by embedding compliance checks into contracts, media approvals and operational processes.

Qadi’s AI agents can review legal documents such as NDAs and master service agreements against regional requirements, while simultaneously scanning marketing assets for compliance with financial promotion and advertising rules.

Core42’s infrastructure ensures that all data, model training and AI compute remain within UAE national boundaries, addressing data sovereignty concerns common across regulated sectors.

Mohamad El Charif, founder of Qadi, said the partnership enables the company to scale while maintaining strict governance standards. Mohammed Retmi, vice president of sovereign public cloud at Core42, said the collaboration reflects growing demand for regionally anchored, responsible AI in legal services.

The investment led by Incubayt earlier this year is being used to expand Qadi’s engineering capabilities, strengthen legal AI models and support regional expansion.