The India AI Impact Summit 2026 was expected to be New Delhi’s announcement of digital sovereignty. The Summit was branded as the first major AI summit in the Global South, and the lead feature was PM Narendra Modis dream of a “Viksit Bharat” (Developed India) by 2047.
However, the Day 1 of 5-Day gathering at Bharat Mandapam changed from a high-tech showcase to a masterclass in mismanagement, marked by a high-profile robot scandal and a series of security-related thefts.
While the Prime Minister proclaimed the slogan “Sarvajan Hitay, Sarvajan Sukhaye” (Welfare for all, Happiness for all), the reality on the ground for the thousands of delegates was far from being joyful.
Management Issues at the World Stage
Although it was meant to be a summit entirely focused on Artificial Intelligence, the way it was run felt ironically primitive. Among the problems reported by the attendees was a breakdown of the very digital public infrastructure that India is known for:
- Registration Glitches: It was said that the registration system for an event of this magnitude was handled through Excel sheets resulting in colossal delays.
- The 7 AM Queues: Thousands of Startup Founders, International Delegates, and Students were left stranded in unseasonal heat. QR codes failed to scanned, and the highly publicized DigiYatra entry points became sources of crowd congestion.
- Security Overreach: One of the most significant disruptions that the audience had to face was when the “sanitization” sweeps were conducted. Before the Prime Ministers visit, security personnel cleared the whole halls at noon for a 2:00 PM event, locking the exhibitors out of their booths, thus, no food, water, or restrooms for up to six hours.
- Connectivity Irony: At a venue that was supposed to be the epitome of 6G and AI future-readiness, there were local mobile network issues as the mobile internet was reportedly spotty, and the local Wi-Fi found it hard to support the huge crowd of over 70,000 people.
The Tech Scandals: Theft and “Made-in-China” Products
The summit faced two major scandals that brought ethics and security issues in the high-security zone under debate.
- The Stolen Prototypes
After a surprise security sweep by the Prime Minister’s security team forced him to temporarily evacuate his booth, Dhananjay Yadav, CEO of Bengaluru, based startup NeoSapien, found out that his patented AI wearables had been stolen. Yadav went out on social media revealing the shocking security lapse. He remarked that the disappearance of the products at a “high-security zone” where even they were only the officials and the security had access was quite an irony. - The Galgotias Robot Fiasco
One of the “Atmanirbhar” narratives most embarrassing moments was the Galgotias University Scandal. The institution displayed a robotic dog named “Orion” and claimed it was a homegrown product developed under a 350 crore AI initiative. Tech enthusiasts who were very familiar with the matter quickly spotted it as a Unitree Go2, a robot that could be bought commercially and was actually manufactured in China. Following the unfriendly response on social media and criticism from the opposition, the university was eventually asked to leave the summit.
There was also a Drone, which they claimed that they have built this Drone Model from scratch, done end to end engineering of it. But the Drone is commercially available as Striker V3 ARF.
Repercussions: A Blow to “Brand India”
The devastated effects of the 2026 summit are far from being just embarrassing headlines:
- Startup Morale: Numerous local entrepreneurs expressed that they were “forgotten” at the event that was meant to be theirs. The founders being treated as second, class citizens compared to VVIPs has caused a heated discussion on whether India’s technology ecosystem is really a show only for the big shots, not for the people who create the innovations.
- International Credibility: Among the reputable names such as Sam Altman and Bill Gates being present, the logistical fiascoes and the “Chinese, as, Indian” robot scandal have harmed India’s image as a world, class, well, organized tech hub.
- The “VVIP Gap”: The conference basically exposed a disconnect between what the government envisions on a grand scale and what it actually delivers on the ground, where the concern for one persons safety overshadowed an entire industrys well, functioning event.
IT Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw has apologized publicly and created a “war room” to concentrate the remaining days of the summit. However, for those who lost their prototypes or spent hours queuing, the harm to the “AI Superpower” story seems to be irreversible.

