Today at MWC25 Kigali, Mr. Amara Brewah, Director General of the National Communications Authority (NatCA) Sierra Leone, delivered a landmark keynote address titled “Empowering Africa Through Inclusive Spectrum Policies” to a distinguished audience of ministers, regulators, industry leaders, and development partners.

Visionary Voice for Africa’s Digital Future

Mr. Brewah’s keynote was more than a policy address it was a call to action. With clarity and conviction, he emphasized that Africa’s next wave of development will be powered not by oil or diamonds, but by connectivity. At the heart of that transformation, he said, lies a quiet, invisible, yet priceless resource: spectrum.

“Spectrum may be invisible,” he said, “but its impact is everywhere. It powers our phones, our radios, our emergency services, our schools, our hospitals, and our economies.”

He framed inclusive spectrum policy as not merely technical, but as a social, economic, and moral mission, advocating for fairness and equity so that every African whether in a capital city or a rural village has a signal, a voice, and a chance.

Policy Reform with Purpose

Mr. Brewah outlined a bold framework for spectrum reform across Africa, calling for:

Transparent licensing to attract investment

Fair pricing to encourage rural rollout

Coverage-based incentives over revenue-based models

Innovation-friendly policies to empower smaller players and communities

He urged policymakers to treat spectrum not as a revenue stream but as a development tool, emphasizing that “every connected village means hope restored.”

Rural Connectivity: From Isolation to Empowerment

Highlighting the transformative power of rural connectivity, Mr. Brewah shared vivid examples:

A farmer in Kambia checking market prices

A nurse in a village clinic consulting a doctor in Freetown

A student attending online classes from a remote area

“Connectivity turns isolation into inclusion. It turns potential into prosperity. It turns inequality into empowerment,” he said.

He stressed that the last mile must enjoy the same quality of connection as the first, and that inclusion requires predictable policies, infrastructure sharing, and simplified approvals.

 

Sierra Leone’s Leadership in Spectrum Innovation

Under Mr. Brewah’s leadership, NatCA Sierra Leone has become a regional model for progressive spectrum management by:

Modernizing spectrum frameworks to be transparent, fair, and inclusive

Reviewing fees to attract investment

Promoting partnerships and infrastructure sharing

Aligning with regional roadmaps and collaborating with WATRA, ATU, and ITU

He proudly noted Sierra Leone’s success with NGSO frameworks, which have expanded coverage to rural and remote communities, bridging the digital divide.

“Our goal is simple: to make Sierra Leone a country where no community is left offline, and where connectivity is treated not as a luxury but as a right.”

A Human-Centered Approach

Mr. Brewah concluded with a deeply personal story of Aminata, a young girl in rural Sierra Leone who studies by torchlight and dreams of becoming a nurse. Her access to online learning, powered by inclusive spectrum policy, symbolizes the human impact of digital equity.

“It’s not about megahertz it’s about hope. Hope made visible through connectivity.”

A Continental Call to Action

He closed with three clear commitments for Africa’s digital future:

1. Publish or update national connectivity roadmaps

2. Reform spectrum pricing and licensing for rural expansion

3. Promote collaboration and innovation from community networks to satellites

“Spectrum is not just a technical resource. It is a human resource. It carries the voices of our people, the ideas of our youth, and the dreams of our future.”

 

 

A Beacon at MWC25 Kigali

Mr. Brewah’s keynote was a defining moment at Africa’s premier connectivity event. His leadership, grounded in vision and inclusivity, continues to inspire bold strategies for digital empowerment across the continent.

“Because when Africa is connected, Africa is unstoppable.”