GET /api/v0.1/hansard/entries/389682/?format=api
HTTP 200 OK
Allow: GET, PUT, PATCH, DELETE, HEAD, OPTIONS
Content-Type: application/json
Vary: Accept
{
"id": 389682,
"url": "https://info.mzalendo.com/api/v0.1/hansard/entries/389682/?format=api",
"text_counter": 94,
"type": "other",
"speaker_name": "",
"speaker_title": "",
"speaker": null,
"content": ", help me transfer back home.” But if you have institutionalized these reservists to augment the police, then these disturbances and so on will not arise. It will cost us very little to achieve so much in terms of security. This will really help the country in reaching the required levels of security, because without security we will not develop. Madam Temporary Speaker, if you go to Kiambu, which sometimes we talk about as being a favoured county, people have built wonderful homes past Runda, but they cannot sleep there. They come to sleep in flats in Nairobi when they have a ten bedroom house in Kiambu, because of fear of criminal attacks. They walk in and out anytime. If we institutionalize this then it will become very easy to police our villages. Even in deprived neighbourhoods like Kibera, Mathare and Kawangware people know each other. They know that it is so-and-so’s son that is disturbing people. If you organize them, they will be able to get hold of this boy or girl. I remember a case where two parents, a man and his wife from Buru Buru, took a carton of whisky to the Officer Commanding Police Station (OCS) in Ngong to congratulate and thank him for shooting their son who was a thug. They said: “Thank you so much for doing what you did. This boy has done so much harm to our neighbourhood and now he was operating in Kiserian. For you to have tracked him down and killed him, you have saved us, as parents and society.” These are the things community policing and reservism will help. Madam Temporary Speaker, with those few remarks, I support very strongly."
}