All parliamentary appearances
Entries 5801 to 5810 of 7480.
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24 Nov 2011 in National Assembly:
on behalf of
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24 Nov 2011 in National Assembly:
Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, unfortunately the Attorney- General has not supplied me with a written answer. Anyway, he could proceed, if he does not have another copy.
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24 Nov 2011 in National Assembly:
Yes, Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir. Let it be the last Question.
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24 Nov 2011 in National Assembly:
on behalf of,
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24 Nov 2011 in National Assembly:
Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, actually I did not want to interrupt the Attorney General as he was going through the answer.
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24 Nov 2011 in National Assembly:
Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, I would like to seek your guidance on this, because part (b) of the Question asked how much money the Government lost through companies that have closed down after being placed under receivership over the same period. In his answer, he has stated that it is not easy to assign a precise figure of the amount of money.
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24 Nov 2011 in National Assembly:
Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, he has gone ahead to enumerate 26 of these companies since 1986. I do not see really why he is finding it difficult to work through the 26 companies and give a figure of how much the Government could have lost through these companies. He says these 22 companies have been sold.
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24 Nov 2011 in National Assembly:
So, Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, I would like to seek your guidance, because I see he is evading answering part (b) of the Question which was very specific about how much money the Government could have lost. He has already stated the companies they sold. Therefore, he should be in a position to get the information to me. I thought he could have done much better by providing that information.
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24 Nov 2011 in National Assembly:
Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, before I ask my first question, I would like to seek your guidance.
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23 Nov 2011 in National Assembly:
Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, it is the same Government of Kenya (GOK) that is capable of demolishing huge buildings at Syokimau and Eastleigh that the Assistant Minister is saying cannot access that piece of land. Could the Assistant Minister come out categorically and tell us who is protecting these people? They must have someone who is protecting them, which is making it impossible for the Government to access the land contrary to what we see in other places!
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