All parliamentary appearances
Entries 1931 to 1940 of 2169.
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18 Jun 2009 in National Assembly:
Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, may I add my voice to what Mr. Njuguna said, that this particular Assistant Minister is very hardworking. Having said that, could he confirm that he can convert that hard work to making sure that the police act in these cases?
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17 Jun 2009 in National Assembly:
On a point of order, Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir. The Assistant Minister has referred to Section 110 of the Constitution as overriding the provisions of the Act that Mr. Mbadi has referred to. Is it in order for the Assistant Minister to mislead the House when he knows very well that the requirement of the position of the Controller and Auditor-General is a person and not an institution?
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17 Jun 2009 in National Assembly:
Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, some of the teachers that we have in this Republic work in areas that are in actual fact hardship areas, but are not so classified. It becomes difficult for them to attend classes to further their careers. Under those circumstances, what is the Ministry doing to ensure that teachers who are in far flung areas have access to further education?
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16 Jun 2009 in National Assembly:
On a point of order, Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir. You heard the hon. Assistant Minister say that the police have closed their file and recommended to the Attorney-General to take action. He cannot come to the House and tell us that the matter is still under investigations.
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16 Jun 2009 in National Assembly:
On a point of order, Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir. What you have asked the hon. Assistant Minister to do is to undertake. What he is doing is to prevail upon the Attorney-General. Could he understand that these are two different words? Are you undertaking or not undertaking?
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10 Jun 2009 in National Assembly:
Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, the hon. Assistant Minister is burying his head in the sand. He must know, as a fact, that tourist hotels at the coast do not discharge raw waste during the day. They wait for the night when the tide is high and they discharge hot raw waste. Could he confirm that Serena and White Sands do not do so?
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10 Jun 2009 in National Assembly:
On a point of order, Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir. You must have noticed that the Assistant Minister is contradicting himself many, many times in the way he has answered this Question. Matters of environment and pollution are serious and have a direct bearing on the tourism industry in Kenya. Under these circumstances, I humbly request that this issue be referred to the relevant Departmental Committee of Parliament for investigation.
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10 Jun 2009 in National Assembly:
On a point of information, Mr. Speaker, Sir.
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10 Jun 2009 in National Assembly:
asked the Minister for Justice, National Cohesion and Constitutional Affairs:-
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10 Jun 2009 in National Assembly:
Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, this Ministry is headed by a Senior Counsel, and the Assistant Minister is my very good learned friend. I would expect a better answer. If, since 1986, the Government has actively said that it does not support capital punishment, then why wait for the Constitution to be amended? To remove the death sentence does not need an amendment to the Constitution. You only need to introduce a miscellaneous amendments Bill to amend the Penal Code to remove the death sentence. That is all! Why has this not been done?
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