All parliamentary appearances
Entries 9721 to 9730 of 9741.
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26 Apr 2006 in National Assembly:
Thank you, Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir. With due respect to the hon. Member who is a senior counsel; if he makes just a little effort, and remember that I am a qualified medical practitioner, he will acknowledge the fact, that sexual process is 100 per cent in the mind for it to---
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26 Apr 2006 in National Assembly:
Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, I had referred the House to page 353. Clause 8, Subsection 5 is very important. It attempts to cushion somebody appearing in court on the charge of defilement. Clause 8(1) states:- "A person who commits an act which causes penetration with a child is guilty of an offence termed defilement". Clause 8(5) goes on to state:- "It is a defence to a child under this section if- (a) it is proved that such child deceived the accused person into believing that she was over the age of eighteen years at the time of the alleged commission ...
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26 Apr 2006 in National Assembly:
Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, I am most obliged. If during that time I see that the new Bill that they will have brought will not have done the amendment, I will bring it. However, all I wanted to say is that Clause 5(c) should be inserted to cushion this special group of people; they will then have to add that:- "If the accused was a person carrying out a scientific, ethical or a medical figure". This is because if we do not do that, the medical practitioners on many occasions perform procedures which, just for the lack of the right ...
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26 Apr 2006 in National Assembly:
Deputy Speaker, Sir, may I give an example because hon. Wanjala seems to be getting lost?
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26 Apr 2006 in National Assembly:
Mr. Deputy Spekaer, Sir, some of these professionals are called upon as a life-saving measure to do what is tantamount to defilement. For example, we have children who are born with a very tight hymen and, therefore, when they start menstruating the parents come to the doctors complaining that their child is pregnant, the abdomen is distended and when we examine, we find that the menstrual flow has been coming every month and accumulating because there is no let out. So, the doctor aggressively takes a knife and actually "opens" the child. If you do not protect him, an ignorant ...
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26 Apr 2006 in National Assembly:
Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, amongst the Luyias, the daughter of your brother is the sister of April 26, 2006 PARLIAMENTARY DEBATES 753 your son. In English, they call it cousin, but in Luo, Kamba and Luyia, we do not have the word "cousin". Now, in this booklet, we are referring to cousin. What do you find among the Somalis? In Somali, the daughter of your brother and your son are relatives which, in their culture, relative means they can actually be encouraged to marry so as for the family to stay together.
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26 Apr 2006 in National Assembly:
So, hon Muite, if you do not address this issue of culture, you will end up taking Somalis to jail when actually to them it is not supposed to be the case, unless culture has been changed in this country. Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, on this same Clause 20, I want to talk about a very interesting thing. The daughter of the sister of your wife is your niece according to the Kambas. In English, the daughter of your wife's sister is your niece, just like in Kamba, but the difference obtains in the sense that amongst the Luos and ...
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26 Apr 2006 in National Assembly:
So, if you can marry the sister of your wife and her daughter is your niece---
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26 Apr 2006 in National Assembly:
Thank you, Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir. With all due respect to hon. Ms. Ndung'u, I support this Bill more than you because I have more daughters than you!
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26 Apr 2006 in National Assembly:
Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, it is the absence of sensitivity to the reality of culture that the hon. Member, who is an urbanite, thinks that this is a light matter.
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