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"speaker_name": "Eng. Toro",
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"legal_name": "Joshua Ngugi Toro",
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"content": "Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, you are right. The Question does not talk about \"national\". It talks about the contravention of the \"International Highway Code\". It is good to answer a Question the way it has been asked. Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, bumps are not mentioned in any national or international highway code anywhere in the world. So, it is not prohibited anywhere. Everything has to do with how you manage traffic on our roads. Class \"A\", \"B\" and \"C\" roads are our highway roads and they have to be managed properly. The management of those roads depends on how our Kenyan drivers behave. It is not a secret that our own drivers have no respect for road signs, speed limits and other motorists. Our Kenyan drivers should change their mentality and follow speed limits. When you approach towns, speed limits range from 40 kilometres to 50 kilometres per hour. Until they obey those road signs, we will be forced to accept demands by leaders and Members of Parliament to erect roads bumps on certain roads to avoid accidents."
}