All parliamentary appearances
Entries 301 to 310 of 896.
-
8 Sep 2011 in National Assembly:
Mr. Speaker, Sir, as I am speaking, we have a report which is ready. But we assume that other Committee Members will not be available.
view
-
8 Sep 2011 in National Assembly:
Mr. Speaker, Sir, as I speak, we have a report which is ready. But we assume that other Committee Members will not be available.
view
-
8 Sep 2011 in National Assembly:
Mr. Speaker, Sir, we do not want to do a shoddy job. We are asking that---
view
-
8 Sep 2011 in National Assembly:
Mr. Speaker, Sir, we do not want to do a shoddy job. We are asking that---
view
-
8 Sep 2011 in National Assembly:
Mr. Speaker, Sir, we could have made the report ready today, but we needed to conclude it properly and bring it to the House. But when we were going through it this morning, we found out that we need to even do more work.
view
-
8 Sep 2011 in National Assembly:
Mr. Speaker, Sir, we could have made the report ready today, but we needed to conclude it properly and bring it to the House. But when we were going through it this morning, we found out that we need to even do more work.
view
-
8 Sep 2011 in National Assembly:
Mr. Speaker, Sir, we can do it within four weeks!
view
-
8 Sep 2011 in National Assembly:
Mr. Speaker, Sir, we can do it within four weeks!
view
-
8 Sep 2011 in National Assembly:
Mr. Speaker, Sir, I appreciate the way the Minister has responded to the Question, which is okay. However, it is not only Safaricom Limited which operates at the borders. There are other Kenyan mobile network operators. To tell Kenyans to actually tune into one network is not democratic. At the borders, anybody using a mobile phone should be free to have his mobile phone handset select the strongest signal. If one is a Safaricom user, one should tune to Safaricom. If there are Airtel users, they should be able to tune to the Airtel network. The network operators, namely Safaricom, ...
view
-
8 Sep 2011 in National Assembly:
Mr. Speaker, Sir, I appreciate the way the Minister has responded to the Question, which is okay. However, it is not only Safaricom Limited which operates at the borders. There are other Kenyan mobile network operators. To tell Kenyans to actually tune into one network is not democratic. At the borders, anybody using a mobile phone should be free to have his mobile phone handset select the strongest signal. If one is a Safaricom user, one should tune to Safaricom. If there are Airtel users, they should be able to tune to the Airtel network. The network operators, namely Safaricom, ...
view