A civic humanitarian initiative delivering nine mobile applications designed for civilian survival, coordination, and resilience during wars, disasters, and infrastructure collapse.
During war, disasters, or major infrastructure disruptions, cellular service and internet connectivity often become unavailable. EGK's Humanitarian Resilience Initiative delivers a suite of nine offline-first mobile applications — free of charge — ensuring civilians can access critical survival tools even in the harshest conditions.
"Technology should serve humanity, particularly during times of crisis and vulnerability. This initiative is not commercial in nature. It is a civic humanitarian effort."
— Isaac Khor Eng Gian, Founder
Nine purpose-built applications covering every critical need — from first aid to family reunification, document safety to mesh communication. All free, all for humanity.
Mushi says: "Even in the darkest moments, you are not alone. These apps are here to help. Download them before you need them. 🌸"
During wars and disasters, the first thing to fail is connectivity. EHRI apps are architected from the ground up to function without cellular networks, internet, or centralized infrastructure.
EHRI directly serves six UN Sustainable Development Goals — demonstrating that civic technology can advance global humanitarian commitments.
EGK has written formally to the United Nations Humanitarian Coordination and Innovation Teams. UNFPA has already referred this initiative to UN Malaysia for review. We respectfully seek three areas of collaboration:
Dear United Nations Humanitarian Coordination and Innovation Teams,
I am writing to respectfully present a humanitarian technology initiative developed to support civilian safety and resilience during crises, armed conflicts, and natural disasters. In light of escalating humanitarian challenges globally, including the ongoing Middle East crisis, I have released a suite of nine mobile applications designed specifically for civilian survival, coordination, and humanitarian assistance — collectively the EGK Humanitarian Resilience Initiative (EHRI).
A key principle is offline-first architecture. During war and disasters, cellular service and internet often become unavailable. These applications are designed to function without reliance on centralized infrastructure, allowing civilians to access critical tools even in low-connectivity environments.
In recognition of the urgent humanitarian need, all applications are currently being made available free of charge to ensure the widest possible access. This initiative is not commercial in nature — it is developed as a civic humanitarian effort with the guiding principle that technology should serve humanity, particularly during times of crisis and vulnerability.
— Isaac Khor Eng Gian, EGK Microelectronic Solutions Group Sdn. Bhd., Penang, Malaysia
"Mushi believes every child and family deserves safety. 🌸 Please partner with us."
"This initiative is not commercial in nature. It is developed as a civic humanitarian effort with the guiding principle that technology should serve humanity — particularly during times of crisis and vulnerability. I would be honored if the United Nations could review this initiative."
Isaac Khor Eng Gian is the founder of EGK Microelectronic Solutions Group Sdn. Bhd., based in Penang, Malaysia. Beyond EHRI, EGK has developed the EGK AI Adventure educational series (Malaysia's first KSSR-aligned AI literacy books), the EGK Anti-Bully Careline initiative, and the Smart Character Education series — all reflecting a deep commitment to using technology for social good.
The nine EHRI applications were built on Apple's development platform. Isaac extends sincere appreciation to Apple Inc. for enabling independent civic developers to create privacy-focused, resilient humanitarian tools.