ETOW Radios Bolster Sierra Leone Human Rights Effort
In a donation ceremony at the National Museum in Freetown, ACIPP’s Executive Director Simon Tsike-Sossah (standing) discusses radios donated by Ears To Our World. Seated next to Mr. Tsike-Sossah is Ibrahim Tommy, CARL’s executive director; seated at far left is Imma Mäder, ACIPP’s director for marketing and recruitment. (Photo by Kelsey Lizotte for ACIPP West Africa).
In its continuing effort to improve the lives of children and their support networks in the developing world, Ears To Our World recently donated thirty world band radios to a human rights program jointly run by the African Community Internship Placement Programme (ACIPP) West Africa and the Centre for Accountability and the Rule of Law-Sierra Leone (CARL-SL). The radios are part of a proposed project that will use short messaging service (SMS) to generate data for human rights monitoring in Sierra Leone.
In a donation ceremony at the National Museum in Freetown, Ibrahim Tommy, CARL’s executive director, explained that CARL and ACIPP West Africa are working together on a new technology-focused approach to human rights efforts. He said that the self-powered ETOW radios would contribute to the success of their Open Society Initiative for West Africa (OSIWA), established to promote transparency and accountability in local councils, as well as to other current and future undertakings.
CARL-SL will distribute the radios in 15 communities across the country, where the organization’s locally based monitors work to promote human rights through combatting sexual and gender-based violence, and enhancing accountability and transparency in local government. The trained recipients will use the radios to tune various community radio stations and share the information learned with their communities, telling inhabitants about daily happenings in the country, and covering issues relating to human rights, domestic violence, good governance, transparency, and accountability, thereby empowering people through information dissemination.
As an added benefit, Tommy pointed out that the radios offer a reduced burden for remote communities because they do not require a battery, and also offer mobile phone charging and flashlight capability. “In a country where electricity still remains a major challenge, particularly in rural communities, it is exciting to think of the ways these radios would enhance access to information in the communities we work,” Tommy said.
Referring to the ETOW radios, ACIPP’s Executive Director Simon Tsike-Sossah added, “There is so much power in information, and I am extremely delighted for the potential beneficiaries of this donation.”
ACIPP is a Netherlands-based organization whose mission is to foster exchange and community engagement between youth worldwide in order to enhance West Africa’s building capacities and capabilities.
CARL-SL is an independent, not-for-profit organization that seeks to promote a just society for all persons in Sierra Leone through monitoring institutions of accountability, outreach, and advocacy for institutional transparency, capacity building, and empowerment of citizens, all goals that ETOW likewise supports.
Monday is World Radio Day, a celebration of the importance of the medium of radio throughout our world. Ears To Our World (ETOW) is celebrating by sending more radios to the world’s newest country: South Sudan.
Our partner in that war-torn region, Project Education Sudan (PES), is a non-profit that builds primary and secondary schools and trains teachers in rural villages in South Sudan; ETOW’s radios, we’re pleased to state, taking a starring role in this teacher training program. There are currently four PES schools in an area of Southern Sudan so remote that resources often have to be flown in on chartered planes. ETOW radios are in all four, helping teachers bring both education and hope to a devastated population. There is currently no public telecommunications infrastructure in South Sudan, yet ETOW radios make diverse programming available to these teachers, via shortwave and FM broadcasts. In classrooms that lack not only electricity, but often paper and pencils, these rugged, self-powered worldband receivers offer a tremendous wealth of free teaching material.
Our shipment of forty five additional radios is heading there. Daniel Majok Gai, a member of the board of directors of PES as well as its South Sudan program director, tells us that the teachers in the new schools are using ETOW radios to listen to FM 95.5 news from 6–10 a.m. and from 3–10 p.m. and to South Sudan Mirriaya news on a daily basis.


Great news: Ears To Our World has been invited to make a presentation about the work we do, and how it addresses humanitarian needs in the developing world, at the first-ever IEEE Global Humanitarian Technology Conference. The IEEE (The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers) is the world’s largest professional association dedicated to advancing technological innovation and excellence for the benefit of humanity.
ETOW founder, Thomas Witherspoon, and board member Ed Harris recently answered a “Call for Papers” from the organizers of this prestigious forum, coauthoring and submitting a paper entitled “Avoiding the 30-Pound Paperweight: Success Via Contextually Appropriate Technologies.” We’re delighted to announce that the paper--which details how to successfully incorporate into humanitarian efforts the “human vector” (the real-world needs and input of the people served) with the “technological vector” (the tools currently available)--was accepted. Thomas will present the paper, and explain how ETOW exemplifies this approach, to conference attendees, including technologists, representatives from NGOs, governments, academe, funders, and industry.
At Ears To Our World, we have long wanted to give radios directly to school children in developing regions, but for a child, carrying one of our self-powered radios isn't always practical or even advisable, as this could make such children a target of theft. This is one of the reasons why teachers are the guardians of our radios.
But ETOW recently hatched an idea to pursue the design and creation of an inexpensive kit that children could, themselves, assemble into a simple working FM radio--maybe even a green product, no less, in that the kit radio might incorporate a re-purposed plastic bottle as the radio's housing and/or a scrap cardboard base to hold together its components. If the radio is somehow damaged, parts could thus be easily pulled off and replaced.
Etón Corporation, in response to our Radios To Haiti initiative, has generously donated over 300 self-powered radios to Ears To Our World for immediate shipment to Port-au-Prince, Haiti, through our logistics partner, Operation USA.
We have partnered with Operation USA to deliver and distribute our radios to the areas of Haiti affected by the earthquake. Operation USA is a charity that specializes in logistics; their sole purpose is to deliver aid to countries in need, such as Haiti, and for this reason they can do so quickly and efficiently. ETOW is pleased to be partnering with this reputable organization; we look forward to sending more radios to Haiti in the very near future.
At ETOW, we know that in times of crisis, the dissemination of basic information is of extreme importance; it can save lives.
Therefore, although sending radios to Haiti following that country's recent devastating earthquake broadens the scope of our usual program, in light of the dire emergency the country now faces, ETOW has decided to extend our reach beyond schools and teachers, to distribute a substantial number of Eton Corporation-donated ETOW radios to individuals in remote and impoverished areas affected by the recent earthquake.