Bonny Khalwale

Born

5th August 1960

Post

P.O. Box 2877, Kakamega, Kenya

Post

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

Email

bonimtetezi@gmail.com

Telephone

0721 318722

Link

@bonimtetezi on Twitter

All parliamentary appearances

Entries 8161 to 8170 of 9741.

  • 3 Nov 2010 in National Assembly: Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, the Assistant Minister has said that the recruitment exercise follows a directive from the Office of the President. Could he confirm whether that directive from the President also includes a special quota for youth who are recruited directly without being identified from their mother districts and enjoy patronage of senior army officers and some of the politicians, especially those in the Ministry? view
  • 3 Nov 2010 in National Assembly: Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, I have looked at the list. What concerns me is the rationale used in deciding that so much would be spent in a particular constituency. I would like the Minister to explain why in Kitui Central, there were ten projects while in Mutito, there are only two projects. What is worse is that there was no project in Kaiti. The Minister should explain where a project called Nzambani, which appears as number six in her list, is located because a good samaritan from the ground has just sent me a text saying that, that project ... view
  • 3 Nov 2010 in National Assembly: Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, I am not a stranger in Ukambani. I was a District Medical Officer of Health in Machakos. Nzambani is not in Machakos but in Mutito. So, when the Minister tells this House that she spent Kshs3.2 million on a project called Nzambani in Machakos Town, she is misleading the House because the project does not exist on the ground. She should tell us where she took the money that she supposedly spent on the Nzambani project in Machakos Town. view
  • 3 Nov 2010 in National Assembly: Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, whereas we congratulate the Prime Minister for the effort he is putting on the Mau, Kenyans remember only very well that the people who were first targeted were mainly evictees who are poor. view
  • 3 Nov 2010 in National Assembly: Could he clarify whether the Government was not merely using these poor Kenyans as sacrificial lambs, so as to play to the public gallery, leaving the high and mighty sitting pretty? If the Government was, indeed, not playing to the public gallery, could he tell us how many farms to date the Government has repossessed from the big fish since this exercise began? He should specifically specify whether the big fish he has been able to repossess land from include the former retired President and other politicians who also sit in this House today? view
  • 3 Nov 2010 in National Assembly: On a point of order, Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir. I rise under Standing Order No.46. Since the Prime Minister has said that he is going to move against the “big fish” in answer to my question on Phase III, could he confirm that he is actually going to apply Section 40(6) of the Constitution and evict former President Moi and other powerful politicians from the Mau Forest? view
  • 3 Nov 2010 in National Assembly: Secondly, I do not know what Kenyans are thinking of us when we allow the Prime Minister to get away with the remark that “the 38 people who died would have died anyway”. Could he tell us exactly the causes of the deaths of those poor Kenyans, so that we may be satisfied that people in that area are not dying from illnesses arising from the adverse ecosystem in which they have been forced to stay by the Government for far too long? view
  • 3 Nov 2010 in National Assembly: Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, I stood under Standing Order No.46 and made reference to Section 40(6) of the Constitution. view
  • 3 Nov 2010 in National Assembly: Yes, Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir. view
  • 3 Nov 2010 in National Assembly: Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, my deepest condolences to the families of the youths who died. Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, the Minister knows that during the 90 minutes of the game, the central referee and the fourth referee, sometimes called the match commissioners, are the ones in charge of the stadium; for the playing, coaches and fans. On this fateful day, a prominent player called Mr. Ottomax, when he saw what was happening at the gate – people were dying – he went on to the pitch and alerted the central referee. Instead of them stopping the match, they descended on ... view

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