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"id": 718263,
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"type": "speech",
"speaker_name": "Hon. Kang’ata",
"speaker_title": "",
"speaker": {
"id": 1826,
"legal_name": "Irungu Kang'ata",
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"content": "sex matters. Putting this role to third parties/strangers does not make sense at all. Therefore, I want to state that sex education should be left to parents. I oppose the proposal of placing that role to the teachers. These things are against our African culture. They are things that we do not discuss in public for a good cause. In my area, you can tell children who have undergone education through schools which have strong religious orientation. Those children tend to have better outcomes as opposed to those who go through a school that has no religious orientation. It makes all the sense when religion tells us that this issue should be left to parents and the church as opposed to the idea of giving condoms to our children. They will use condoms on the first day and forget on the third day and then we have issues of early pregnancies. We should follow the religious model which has worked. Religious schools have the best education outcomes. These liberal ideas do not make sense at all. I oppose the idea of including sex education in schools syllabus. There is also this issue of your proposal as provided in Clause 2. I am going to read. You are defining “indecent act” in the following manner: “(i) Any contact between any part of the body of a person with the genital organs, breasts or buttocks of another, but does not include an act that causes penetration.” This definition is very broad. You all know those boda boda people. I think all the boda"
}