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{
    "id": 628522,
    "url": "https://info.mzalendo.com/api/v0.1/hansard/entries/628522/?format=api",
    "text_counter": 56,
    "type": "speech",
    "speaker_name": "Sen. (Dr.) Khalwale",
    "speaker_title": "",
    "speaker": {
        "id": 170,
        "legal_name": "Bonny Khalwale",
        "slug": "bonny-khalwale"
    },
    "content": "Mr. Temporary Speaker, Sir, border communities find themselves at a challenging geographical location in this country. We have people in our county whose wives are from Uganda. In our culture, a husband’s home is a wife’s home. In our culture too, the wife’s tribe is the husband’s tribe. So, when women who are married in our area are asked to go back to Uganda to bring their parents’ identification documents, how do such documents of Ugandan citizens help to register Kenyans? There is a young man from Musoli Village in Ikolomani, Kakamega County whose wife is a Ugandan. He has been to registration offices for the last ten years but they have never registered the wife. The woman is our wife and she has given birth to our children. If my cousin dies, she will be inherited by us and if the wife dies, she will be buried in Kakamega. What is it that these registration officers want? It should be streamlined."
}