All parliamentary appearances
Entries 5811 to 5820 of 6175.
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29 May 2007 in National Assembly:
Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, the repeal of the Traditional Liquor Licensing Act, Cap.122, was done by this House as part of the tidying up of the Miscellaneous Licences (Amendment) Act, which were debated in this House and passed as part of consolidating the provisions of the Traditional Liquor Licensing Act with the Liquor Licensing Act. It was a matter of moving all the provisions of that into the Liquor Licensing Act. Consequently, there has been no authorization for any one to brew beer without following the Liquor Licensing Act as has been alleged by some of the leaders. Mr. ...
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29 May 2007 in National Assembly:
If hon. Sambu could be listening, I clarified this matter exactly because of that misunderstanding. The Government has not, and I repeat, has not authorised anyone to start brewing traditional liquor unless they follow the law as captured within the Liquor Licensing Act. Anyone else out there purporting that there has been authorization is only playing mischief for political purposes.
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29 May 2007 in National Assembly:
Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, once, again, because all the other hon. Members have understood and took part in this process--- For the benefit of hon. Kosgey and other Members who are still in doubt, the law that you, yourselves, passed in this House repealed the Traditional Liquor Licensing Act and amalgamated its provisions with the Liquor Licensing Act and consequently repealed Cap.122. Nowhere in that law or in that process was the issue of brewing busaa ever entertained. It has not been entertained and, certainly, not by anything attributable to me. I do not know whether I can make ...
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29 May 2007 in National Assembly:
Thank you, Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, May 29, 2007 PARLIAMENTARY DEBATES 1695 Sir. I will try to say as much as possible. Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, I rise to support this Motion. I believe it is time that hon. Members take this well deserved rest. It has been a rather hectic time and a number of things have happened. All this has been happening against a backdrop of very good things happening within the country as we have witnessed with the recent statistics, with the confirmation that our economy is still on a very upward trend, having started from ...
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29 May 2007 in National Assembly:
Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, the only other point I wanted to mention is that, yes, we are starting on a very good footing. I hope that in the course of this recess, hon. Members will take time to familiarise themselves with the new planning tool; the Vision 2030, which aims to really turn Kenya into a prosperous country with high quality of life by the year 2030. I believe that is a national vision that we all need to aspire for and I hope hon. Members will take time to actually understand what the Vision is all about so ...
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29 May 2007 in National Assembly:
1696 PARLIAMENTARY DEBATES May 29, 2007
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22 May 2007 in National Assembly:
Mr. Speaker, Sir, I never meant to imply that I am corrupt. I meant to imply that some hon. Members are corrupt.
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22 May 2007 in National Assembly:
Mr. Speaker, Sir, I take seriously counsel from the Chair and hereby do wish to withdraw the entire statement.
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22 May 2007 in National Assembly:
Mr. Speaker, Sir, I also would like to apologise for that. However, could I also add---
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22 May 2007 in National Assembly:
Mr. Speaker, Sir, I had addressed that in part (b) of my answer. I replied that in view of the fact that the investigations are still going on, it is not possible to table the list of all the creditors who are still owed money by the Government. I answered that last week.
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