All parliamentary appearances

Entries 41 to 48 of 48.

  • 8 May 2013 in National Assembly: Thank you, Mr. Speaker, Sir. My names are Hon. Mburu Stephen Kinyanjui. I rise to support this Bill. My colleague, who is a senior financial expert, Hon. Ng’ongo, has just said that we need to move serious amendments to this Bill. Immediately I got the Estimates of the Recurrent Expenditure, I rushed to the relevant Ministries and found that there were serious discrepancies. For example, in Nyandarua County, where I come, projects that had an allocation of about a Kshs1billion had been removed from these Estimates. These projects fall under three Ministries. So, I concur with my senior financial expert, ... view
  • 8 May 2013 in National Assembly: Thank you, Mr. Speaker, Sir. My names are Hon. Mburu Stephen Kinyanjui. I rise to support this Bill. My colleague, who is a senior financial expert, Hon. Ng’ongo, has just said that we need to move serious amendments to this Bill. Immediately I got the Estimates of the Recurrent Expenditure, I rushed to the relevant Ministries and found that there were serious discrepancies. For example, in Nyandarua County, where I come, projects that had an allocation of about a Kshs1billion had been removed from these Estimates. These projects fall under three Ministries. So, I concur with my senior financial expert, ... view
  • 25 Apr 2013 in National Assembly: Thank you, Hon. Speaker, Sir. First, I would like to congratulate you for being elected the Speaker of this House. Secondly, I would like to remind my colleagues in the CORD Coalition that all of us went to elections on 4th March. It is through the tyranny of numbers that you have found yourself here. You got that certificate because you had more numbers than your opponent. I would like to remind the House that you are Hon. Speaker because we had an election that involved two candidates and you won. So, we the Members of the Jubilee Coalition were ... view
  • 25 Apr 2013 in National Assembly: Thank you, Hon. Speaker, Sir. I can actually say that finally I caught the Speaker’s eye. I have been standing for the last four days without getting an opportunity. view
  • 18 Apr 2013 in National Assembly: Thank you, hon. Deputy Speaker. My names are Stephen Kinyanjui, Member of Parliament for Kinangop Constituency. I would like to take this opportunity to congratulate you and Hon. Speaker. It should go into history that you are the first Deputy Speaker who was elected by more than 75 per cent or two-thirds. I wonder whether hon. Members of this hon. House noted that. view
  • 18 Apr 2013 in National Assembly: Thank you, hon. Deputy Speaker. My names are Stephen Kinyanjui, Member of Parliament for Kinangop Constituency. I would like to take this opportunity to congratulate you and Hon. Speaker. It should go into history that you are the first Deputy Speaker who was elected by more than 75 per cent or two-thirds. I wonder whether hon. Members of this hon. House noted that. view
  • 18 Apr 2013 in National Assembly: I would like straightway to go to the Presidential Address. When I was listening to my dear colleagues speak, they spoke about tarmacking roads and marginalization. I am requesting the Jubilee Coalition, through the party leader, hon. Aden Duale, to file a Motion immediately to be named after KK150. “KK” are my initials. “KK150” means each and every constituency within these five years should have 150 kilometres of bitumen standard roads, and the least should be 100 kilometres. If you calculate that, and I believe we have good teachers and mathematicians, it translates to about 29,000 kilometres of bitumen within ... view
  • 18 Apr 2013 in National Assembly: I would like straightway to go to the Presidential Address. When I was listening to my dear colleagues speak, they spoke about tarmacking roads and marginalization. I am requesting the Jubilee Coalition, through the party leader, hon. Aden Duale, to file a Motion immediately to be named after KK150. “KK” are my initials. “KK150” means each and every constituency within these five years should have 150 kilometres of bitumen standard roads, and the least should be 100 kilometres. If you calculate that, and I believe we have good teachers and mathematicians, it translates to about 29,000 kilometres of bitumen within ... view

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