New Delhi — The Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology’s BHASHINI initiative displayed a suite of multilingual artificial‑intelligence tools at the National Centre for e‑Governance (NCeG) 2026 conference on Thursday, and launched a hackathon aimed at training language models for Rajasthan’s regional dialects, the Press Information Bureau (PIB) reported.
The showcase featured three prototypes: a speech‑to‑text engine that can transcribe in Hindi, Punjabi, Gujarati and Rajasthani; a real‑time translation widget for government portals; and a question‑answering system that draws on state‑level data sets in multiple languages. Developers from Indian Institutes of Technology, private start‑ups and the Centre for Development of Advanced Computing demonstrated the tools to an audience of over 300 civil‑service officials, AI researchers and industry partners.
“The goal is to reduce the digital divide by enabling citizens to interact with e‑government services in their mother tongue,” said a BHASHINI programme official during the press briefing. The official added that the initiative aligns with the government’s Digital India agenda and the recent National Language Policy, which calls for broader use of regional languages in public services.
In conjunction with the exhibition, BHASHINI announced a 48‑hour hackathon scheduled for September 12‑13 in Jaipur. The competition will invite participants to fine‑tune open‑source language models on datasets sourced from Rajasthan’s literary works, folk songs and administrative documents. Winners will receive cash prizes, cloud‑computing credits from the Ministry’s cloud platform and the opportunity to pilot their solutions with state departments.
The Ministry has earmarked ₹15 million for the hackathon, citing the need for “robust, low‑resource language models” that can support local governance, health outreach and agricultural advisories. Organisers noted that while Hindi dominates many digital interfaces, over 30 million people in Rajasthan primarily use Rajasthani dialects, creating a gap in accessibility.
Analysis:
The BHASHINI rollout reflects a broader push by the Indian government to embed AI across public services while addressing linguistic diversity. By showcasing multilingual prototypes at NCeG 2026, the ministry signals both technical progress and political commitment to the Digital India vision. The hackathon’s focus on Rajasthan—a state with a sizable non‑Hindi speaking population—suggests an attempt to pilot scalable solutions that could later be replicated in other regions. However, the success of such initiatives will depend on the availability of high‑quality training data, sustained funding beyond the hackathon, and the ability of government agencies to integrate AI outputs into legacy systems.
Sources
– Press Information Bureau, “BHASHINI Showcases Multilingual AI Innovations at NCeG 2026; Launches Rajasthan Language Model Training Hackathon,” Google News India Technology, https://news.google.com/rss/articles/CBMie0FVX3lxTE5RUVV0V2RaMWFQUFEzT1RFdmdtRGZoVG1WMFM1X3RfQWh5c3VkbUdhanhYV3ZyV3hKZ1g4aGN0MndUeHEyVWtDX3FyZEM0WXBrU1RJMXpUSUxjVTdxU3l3VDdzdnJrTmNjb05IdXZXWUVlbzZHVUQ0emdJMA?oc=5
Story synopsis gathered from: Google News India Technology — source
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