All parliamentary appearances
Entries 1371 to 1380 of 1647.
-
30 Apr 2009 in National Assembly:
Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, I am in agreement. However, I also want the Office of the Prime Minister to note that it is 41 years since this matter happened. It would be important that they take it seriously.
view
-
24 Feb 2009 in National Assembly:
Mr. Speaker, Sir, out of the expectant mothers in that particular month, what percentage was the four who died? I have a feeling this figure constituted over 30 per cent of the expectant mothers. At this point in time, we should not be hearing of those sad cases of expectant mothers dying, particularly with the modern health services.
view
-
19 Feb 2009 in National Assembly:
Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, the Vice-President and Minister for Home Affairs is in the forefront and on record as leading the healing process in this country. He is viewed as the vine of reason. Could he bend backwards, forgive and forget, so that the very bad memories of our prison conditions are all behind us? In any case, even during those very bad moments, sanity prevailed and he stopped a possible prison break in Naivasha. Is it possible for him to just forgive and forget, so that we could put all these things behind us?
view
-
19 Feb 2009 in National Assembly:
Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, I rise to support this Motion and want to be associated with what the hon. Member has just said. Even if the whole list came from North Eastern and these were the most noble men we have in Kenya, we would let it be. Even if they all come from Kiambu, let it be, but let us have men of integrity. Let us have men who will stand to be counted as having guided this country away from this monster called corruption. When they get there, as their first assignment, let them re-evaluate the workers who ...
view
-
19 Feb 2009 in National Assembly:
I would like the Minister for Justice, National Cohesion and Constitutional Affairs to listen. There are officers in the Kenya Anti-Corruption Commission, and I am prepared to give evidence to that effect, who are more corrupt than corruption. Those are the people who are causing jams by placing obstacles on the way to make prosecution impossible.
view
-
19 Feb 2009 in National Assembly:
Thank you for that information!
view
-
19 Feb 2009 in National Assembly:
Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, that brings me to my final point, that sooner than yesterday, we should have that Act back here, so that all those things that are making it impossible to get hold of all those corrupt people, all those things that are making people go scotfree; all those things that make you, when you are not politically correct to appear before the KACC and when you are politically correct to be protected must be cleared.
view
-
19 Feb 2009 in National Assembly:
I do not want to hear about regional balance; I come from the central Rift, and from 1963 we have never had a Cabinet Minister, but we have lived with it. We are over two million people! Regional balance is useless. As of now, let us talk of efficiency! Even Mr. Obama could not have been elected if Americans were considering regional balance.
view
-
19 Feb 2009 in National Assembly:
With those few remarks, I beg to support.
view
-
18 Feb 2009 in National Assembly:
Thank you, Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir. The Minister has given us a very detailed statement. In his statement, he has confirmed that, indeed, there is only one Trustee who is controlling all these assets in excess of Kshs100 billion. Are there no contingency measures within the Act that would make the Minister have another special committee to make sure that one man who has been named is not entrusted with all these assets that belong to workers?
view