Jeremiah Ngayu Kioni

Parties & Coalitions

Born

1965

Post

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

Email

ngayu@ngayuassociates.com

Email

ndaragwa@parliament.go.ke

Link

Facebook

Telephone

0722711052

All parliamentary appearances

Entries 1601 to 1610 of 1730.

  • 18 Feb 2009 in National Assembly: Thank you, Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir. Is it true that there are two Managing Trustees with appointment letters? There is a Mr. Rabongo who has an appointment letter. There is another one who was reinstated by the Permanent Secretary. What is the status of this issue? view
  • 18 Feb 2009 in National Assembly: Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, I rise to seek a Ministerial Statement from the Attorney-General on the ongoing Triton oil saga. We have been told that the case has been dropped against the directors of Triton. I would like the Attorney-General to inform this House under what circumstances the case was dropped. Why was it dropped? How far has the Government gone in trying to recover this money? Do we stand a chance of recovering the Kshs7.5 billion that was lost? view
  • 18 Feb 2009 in National Assembly: On a point of order, Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir. The Government did not indicate when we will get the response. view
  • 4 Feb 2009 in National Assembly: Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, I want to thank the Minister for his honesty, but can he clarify to this House what the basis was for arriving at the 50 councillors? What constituencies were considered and on what basis? view
  • 4 Feb 2009 in National Assembly: Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, I thank you for this opportunity. Today is a special day for me, because on a day like today on 14th February, 1998 my nephew was murdered during the tribal clashes. He was a young student at Kenyatta University. We did try to get prosecution to a point where we had one witness who was bold enough to come to court and give evidence. In our estimation then the evidence was so graphic that we thought the culprit had been nailed. It was ruled that one witness was not adequate, and we had nothing to do. ... view
  • 4 Feb 2009 in National Assembly: 4728 PARLIAMENTARY DEBATES February 4, 2009 view
  • 4 Feb 2009 in National Assembly: Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, we have come this far and we are discussing this Bills here, but the victims are not with us. We have laid on the Table documents on, perhaps, the way it is done, but the victims do not even know what it is that we are discussing here. The victims have a different perception of what is happening. They think that this is a situation where politicians have come together to collude and protect other politicians. Given the scenarios that we have seen this afternoon and the day before, nobody has any reason to doubt that, ... view
  • 4 Feb 2009 in National Assembly: Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, this is a process that might help us to move quickly. But if we proceed to the vote without getting Kenyans behind us, or even getting some hon. Members to understand, because I know there are many who do not understand where we are going, we will shoot down this Bill because of very good reasons that would otherwise have changed if we had time to talk to one another and get Kenyans to move with us. The ICC that many of us seem to favour would end up with five or six people in court. ... view
  • 4 Feb 2009 in National Assembly: Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir as we continue debating this, it is important that we do not get to voting today on this Bill, so that we can get everybody to be with us. When we sit down and explain it to them they will understand it; we have rushed to the Floor of the House and we might vote on this Bill in a short while. I have talked to my people and they are not with us for the simple reason that we have not explained it to them. It would be very painful for me to walk around ... view
  • 4 Feb 2009 in National Assembly: I plead with this House, and the Minister, that we do not take a vote on this issue until we have done proper consultation because we are now discussing the issue from a point of no knowledge. We are going to lose a very important opportunity because we have suspicions. We have more often than not taken the microphone to defend some of our ill-behaviour outside this House. That is not doing us any good in the eye of the public. For this House to be trusted in this process, we have to engage the country. Whatever it is that ... view

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