Agnes Zani

Parties & Coalitions

Email

apzani@yahoo.com

Telephone

0738 734526

Link

@agnes_zani on Twitter

Dr. Agnes Zani

From her childhood days, she recalls that any kind of injustice to anyone made her hair stand on end. At the university, Agnes occasionally acted as the chairperson of her department and started the Ford Foundation International Fellowships Alumni Programme, which she has been chairing since. When Kwale residents threatened to boycott the 2013 elections during the infamous “Pwani si Kenya” unrest, she took it upon herself to offer free civic education to her community. Education tops the former lecturer of University of Nairobi main agenda during her term of service.

All parliamentary appearances

Entries 1371 to 1380 of 1784.

  • 14 Feb 2017 in Senate: We have more than five Senators on their feet. view
  • 14 Feb 2017 in Senate: Sen. Omondi also indicated her support. She could not stand. view
  • 14 Feb 2017 in Senate: Mr. Temporary Speaker, Sir, let me first start by thanking the Committee for the work that they have done. I remember when we started off, we used to talk about lack of enough business to be transacted by this House. Right now, we have a lot of business and I think the Senate has made a mark in this country. This Committee meets weekly to ensure that the Senate is running and that Motions, Bills and other matters of discussion come up in a systematic way. Given the time, we agree that the Membership of the Committee should be maintained ... view
  • 14 Feb 2017 in Senate: Mr. Temporary Speaker, Sir, I beg to move that the Senate do now adjourn to discuss two strikes that have been prominent in this country. Even before these strikes blew out of proportion, as they have now, especially the doctors strike, where now the doctors have been jailed for a month, there were already simmering signs that something was going wrong in both sectors. view
  • 14 Feb 2017 in Senate: Mr. Temporary Speaker, Sir, there was something going wrong in both sectors. In the health and education sectors there was a Collective Bargaining Agreement (CBA). What one would have expected is that something like a CBA is a thing that various employees get into. It is an agreement about specific things; payment, conditions of work, allowance and probable expansion of work in terms of occupations that are there. A CBA conducts and holds quite a lot. That is very critical. The expectation is always that once a CBA agreement has been entered, each part of those who have bargained for ... view
  • 14 Feb 2017 in Senate: Is Sen. (Prof.) Lonyangapuo in order to allude that it is only the Opposition who are hunting for voters and forgetting to take care of the health sector? We know that both sides of the coalition have been out on voter registration drives. The Jubilee Government, especially, should have been in the forefront because they have the mandate to ensure that they get a solution to the problem of the strikes. view
  • 5 Jan 2017 in Senate: Mr. Chairperson, Sir, the use of the word “complementary” is not as simple as we would like to believe it is. It creates a complication in terms of when exactly do we trigger in the complementary aspect. When do we realise that we need to turn to a complementary system? Whichever that system is, that sought of ambiguity will create a lot of problems at the election time. I do not know who will control, at what point, we will proceed with the previous arrangement of having BVR, EVID and RTS, The electronic version of the Senate Hansard Report is ... view
  • 2 Nov 2016 in Senate: On a point of order, Mr. Temporary Speaker, Sir. Is Sen. (Eng.) Karue in order to mislead us that this Bill has been introduced by Sen. Mutula Kilonzo Jnr. while it has been introduced by Sen. Wamatangi? view
  • 2 Nov 2016 in Senate: Mr. Temporary Speaker, Sir, I oblige happily. My apologies for that point of order. view
  • 18 Oct 2016 in Senate: Thank you, Mr. Speaker, Sir. I also stand to--- view

Comments

(For newest comments first please choose 'Newest' from the 'Discussion' tab below.)
comments powered by Disqus