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{
    "id": 956494,
    "url": "https://info.mzalendo.com/api/v0.1/hansard/entries/956494/?format=api",
    "text_counter": 341,
    "type": "speech",
    "speaker_name": "Suba North, ODM",
    "speaker_title": "Hon. (Ms.) Odhiambo-Mabona",
    "speaker": {
        "id": 376,
        "legal_name": "Millie Grace Akoth Odhiambo Mabona",
        "slug": "millie-odhiambo-mabona"
    },
    "content": " Thank you, Hon. Temporary Deputy Speaker. I will clarify. First of all, I would be the greatest defender of Akothee because my home name is Akothee. We have a shared thing with her. Other than that, I love her free spirit - she is quite a free spirit; she is such a go-getter. She is a very strong spirit. So, I support her. What example I was giving is that there was a controversy at one point. I do not know where she was performing. It sent the whole country on fire. Some people thought she had danced semi-naked before her parents. Others were saying it was okay because even Beyonce does it. What I am saying is that, as a country, we are actually at a point where we have to grapple with issues like that. Even though this treaty protects the moral rights of the performer, it does not talk about the moral rights of the public. I guess it is because of all these challenges that we face. What is moral to one person is not necessarily moral to another. Is it acceptable in Kenya when we have wardrobe malfunctions like Janet Jackson did? Is it acceptable in Kenya, for instance, to have a wardrobe malfunction? When you talk about culture, and that is why I was talking about the example of"
}