Asman Kamama

Full name

Asman Abongutum Kamama

Born

8th August 1965

Post

c/o Luke Plapan P.O. Box 60000 Nairobi, Kenya.

Post

Parliament Buildings
Parliament Rd.
P.O Box 41842 – 00100
Nairobi, Kenya

Email

kamamaabongo@yahoo.com

Email

kamama.asman@yahoo.com

Telephone

0729816066

All parliamentary appearances

Entries 2061 to 2070 of 2457.

  • 17 Jun 2009 in National Assembly: Thank you. view
  • 17 Jun 2009 in National Assembly: Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, I beg to second. view
  • 3 Jun 2009 in National Assembly: Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, I also want to join my colleagues in supporting this Motion that we need an induction course for Ministers, Assistant Ministers and holders of Constitutional offices. This is because all of us must understand that the government is an old institution; even before the first republic was formed. It is an old institution starting from the time of Kings David and Solomon all the way to when Aristotle and Plato philosophized on issues of governance. The Government is an old institution that people who are charged with the management of Government affairs must understand. I ... view
  • 20 May 2009 in National Assembly: On a point of order, Madam Temporary Deputy Speaker. Could I be in order to lobby for Mr. Joho, because I found out that his constituency has the highest number of squatters? view
  • 20 May 2009 in National Assembly: Thank you, Madam Temporary Deputy Speaker. I wish, together with my colleagues, to commend Mr. Wamalwa for bringing this Motion and Mr. Mungatana for seconding it. It is a very big challenge to Kenyans and the leadership of this country that we still have squatters in their thousands and nothing tangible has been done to address their problem. It is still very shameful that Kenyans are living as refugees right now. If you go to Daadab Refugee Camp, you will find the Somali are leading better lives than the squatters that we have in this country. view
  • 20 May 2009 in National Assembly: When I was the Assistant Minister for Lands and I served in the provincial administration, I travelled all over this country and found that the squatters live in view
  • 10 Feb 2009 in National Assembly: On a point of order, Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir. It appears as if you are giving disproportionate time to the Members of the Parliamentary Select Committee who have actually discussed these things all through. Would I be in order to ask you to give time to those who are not Members? view
  • 10 Feb 2009 in National Assembly: Thank you very much, Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, for giving me this chance to also support this Motion. I wish to say that we have a lot of confidence in the Parliamentary Select Committee and the team of experts because they represent Kenya. Kenyans are tired of semantics, theatrics and pretence. We have taken quite a lot of time in travelling this journey of getting a new Constitution. The people in the team of experts who have been selected will do a good job and we promise to support them in every step of the way. view
  • 10 Feb 2009 in National Assembly: Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, I want the team of experts to look specifically at the issue of tribalism. Tribalism is our cancer and we need to find ways and means of tackling this cancer so that we have a situation where we will be talking about one Kenya, one nation, one people and the dream that we have been talking about in the entire week. view
  • 10 Feb 2009 in National Assembly: There is regional balance in this team of experts. I am not sure about the longitude or latitude of areas like North Eastern Province. The director comes from the remotest part of this country. The most important thing is that he has what it takes to - the academic credentials and the qualifications, - deliver what Kenyans want in this assignment. view

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