Donate your gently-used computers
Supply stimulating educational software
Furnish classroom with learning desks
99 million people
74,6% lives below the international poverty line, i.e. make less than 2,15 USD per day. 60% live on less than 1,25 USD a day.
47 million people
42% lives below the international poverty line, i.e. make less than 2,15 USD per day.
20,5 million people
60% lives below the international poverty line, i.e. make less than 2,15 USD per day.
54 million people
19 million live below the poverty line making less than 2.15 U.S. dollars a day. 8 million people lived in extreme poverty.
13,8 million people
48,8% lives below the international poverty line, i.e. make less than 2,15 USD per day.
65,5 million people
49,1% live below $1.90 per day
By donating your company's used computers, you're not merely upgrading your own technology and clearing storage space. You're laying the foundation for new opportunities and dreams across the African continent.
We view unused electronics as vehicles for a valuable second life. Donating computers to Africa represents an investment in a future where every child harnesses education to improve their life, uplifting communities and countries alike.
Equipping African schools with tools to boost digital literacy and foster critical thinking lays the groundwork for cross-cultural exchanges and collaboration among tribes, ethnic groups, and nations.
Education is the cornerstone of democracy, empowering individuals with knowledge, critical thinking, and the capacity to challenge injustice.
Education nurtures women's self-confidence and equips them with the competencies necessary for proficient leadership.
Educated young people are increasingly inclined to acquire green skills and embrace environmental standards. Their consumer habits are shifting towards eco-friendly products, stimulating the green economy.
More than
of the population of Sub-Saharan Africa is under the age of 25
Africa's population is projected to reach
Co-Chairperson Strategic Council of the Global Alliance for ICT and Development, Deputy President of National Unity Platform (Uganda), Raportteur of Civil Society Forum of International Conference on the Great Lakes Region of Africa, Director of the UN SCR on Women Peace and Security, Mentor of Gender and Social Inclusion
Co-Chairperson, Strategic Council of the Global Alliance for ICT and Development, laureate of the Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought, the Charlemagne Prize, Martin Luther Fearless Word Prize, John S. McCain Freedom Award, Noble Peace Price Nominee
Executive director of the Uzalendo Afrika Initiative promoting the inclusion of youth and women in policy and governance. Regional organizer for the Africans Rising movement, Chair of the East African Youth Peace Network and a directorate member of the African Network of Youth Policy Experts. Member of the Mombasa Youth Assembly, Kenya.
Advisor to the 2018 Nobel Peace Prize laureate Dr. Denis Mukwege, coordinator of the NGO Congo Notre Avenir, Honorary focal point of the World March of Women movement in North Kivu.
South Africa, Microsoft Senior Manager overseeing partner development across Europe, the Middle East, and Africa.
Practicing physical therapist, a founding member and the treasurer of Women Defending Democracy, a co-founder of other grassroots initiatives to amplify the voices of women in the Great Lakes Region, East and Horn of Africa and the Diaspora community.
National President of the National Union of Women, DRC; Coordinator of Women Partners for Peace in Africa; National Expert for United Nations Population Fund, Member of the UN Economic Commission for Africa, Director General of the National Agency Against Violence to Women and Girls, President of Unión de Asociaciones Familiares (UNAF).
Professor of French, Institute Technique Industrial de Ndjili. Mediator and Membet of the Regional Women Forum of the Internatinoal Conference of the Great Lakes Region
Project administrator for Intelsat Corporation.
CEO OF Sustainable Agro Food
Economics (SAFE) CAMEROON