All parliamentary appearances
Entries 1211 to 1220 of 1622.
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30 Oct 2013 in Senate:
Thank you, Mr. Speaker, Sir, for giving me this chance to contribute towards this Motion on a report which was tabled here yesterday on Energy, Transport and Roads by the Chairman, Sen. Moi. Mr. Speaker, Sir, before we adjourned yesterday; at the rise of the House, I was trying to say how important it is that when delegations get out of Kenya to go and study what happens outside, they should then come back and implement what is important out there and discard what is not useful. As far as I am concerned, the delegation from Kenya left, visited South ...
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30 Oct 2013 in Senate:
On a point of information, Madam Temporary Speaker.
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30 Oct 2013 in Senate:
Madam Temporary Speaker, the Professor is trying to impute the wrong connotation of the meaning of NATO. I would like to inform him that the NATO convention means Northern Atlantic Treaty Organization.
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30 Oct 2013 in Senate:
I am sorry, Madam Temporary Speaker. These are modern phones which never go off when we want them off. Madam Temporary Speaker, we are a worried lot and need the Government to come up with a policy. That is what this Motion is all about. It is trying to seek direction from the Government, so that the farmers can be properly directed, advised and made to understand that economic activities are real.
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29 Oct 2013 in Senate:
Thank you, Madam Temporary Speaker, for giving me this chance to support this wonderful report that has been laid on the Table by the Committee on Energy, Roads and Transportation, chaired by Sen. Moi. We note with a lot of appreciation and mixed feelings that most of our Senate delegations have been going to the East. Why have they been going to the East? It is because the East has developed very fast compared to how Kenya has developed from the time we got our Independence in 1963. At the time we got our Independence, according to what we read, ...
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29 Oct 2013 in Senate:
Madam Temporary Speaker, the rules in South Korea are such that they are oriented towards the development of the country. In South Korea, for example, you cannot walk on roads. There are underground tunnels because the speed of motor vehicles is very high. It is a crime to be found jumping over the road rails. Here, in Kenya, the rules are broken every minute and nobody seems to care. For example, we have the Thika Superhighway. If you went to inspect the road, you will be surprised that most of the
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29 Oct 2013 in Senate:
The electronic version of the Senate Hansard Report is for information purposesonly. A certified version of this Report can be obtained from the Hansard Editor, Senate.
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29 Oct 2013 in Senate:
Madam Temporary Speaker, Sir, I have not.
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24 Oct 2013 in Senate:
Mr. Speaker, Sir, I also rise to request a Statement from the Chairperson of the Standing Committee on National Security and Foreign Relations concerning the kidnappings in Kirinyaga and which might possibly continue taking place unless the situation is arrested. The Statement should address whether the national Government is aware that in the last three months, 11 people in Kirinyaga have been kidnapped and some of them killed. The latest victim is a teacher called Mr. Cyrus Munene Mwenje who was kidnapped and found killed in Mwea Settlement Scheme. Secondly, whether the State could explain the measures the Government is ...
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24 Oct 2013 in Senate:
It is okay. I am convinced. `
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