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{
"id": 641936,
"url": "https://info.mzalendo.com/api/v0.1/hansard/entries/641936/?format=api",
"text_counter": 28,
"type": "speech",
"speaker_name": "Hon. Kubai Iringo",
"speaker_title": "",
"speaker": {
"id": 1574,
"legal_name": "Cyprian Kubai Iringo",
"slug": "cyprian-kubai-iringo"
},
"content": "rough in one way or the other. I fail to understand why one is told to clean his or her finger with a rock so that he or she can get an ID card. It is ridiculous. One is told to bring his or her next of kin so that they can obtain an ID card. If your chief or the local church elder can identify you, why is it very cumbersome to get an ID card in Kenya when it is mandatory? That is why the process has become a cash cow for many officers, including chiefs and those ID card giving officers. If you go to Nyayo House to follow up on your ID card, you must be armed with some money so that you can get it. It has become a cash cow. They do not want to automate the process so that they do not lose that extra money. They come up with frivolous reasons to deny someone an ID card. Someone is given a form to fill. Unfortunately, while filling it at home, if some water, milk or tea pours on it, you are told that you dirtied the form and so, there is no ID card for you. It no longer becomes a right to have an ID card. Instead, you have to kneel to the officers who issue the ID cards. This trend must change. With those few remarks, I beg to second the Motion."
}