All parliamentary appearances
Entries 551 to 560 of 1040.
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7 Jul 2010 in National Assembly:
On a point of order, Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir.
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7 Jul 2010 in National Assembly:
On a point of procedure, Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir.
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7 Jul 2010 in National Assembly:
Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, we have an Order Paper that talks about Mr. Paul Okungu and not Mr. Peter Gicheha.
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1 Jul 2010 in National Assembly:
Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, I do not wish to raise any clarification, but only to let the Vice-President and Minister for Home Affairs know and maybe, communicate the same to the Prime Minister that my father had a similar procedure two months ago and he is doing very well. So, this is a matter that, I am sure, the Prime Minister will get along with. In the meantime, it has only been discovered that camel milk has a very unique power and, perhaps you could advise the Prime Minister to take a lot of camel milk.
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1 Jul 2010 in National Assembly:
Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir, I rise to seek a Ministerial Statement from the Attorney-General. On 18th April, 2010, this House passed the Indemnity Repeal Act. The House expected the Government to move with speed--- The House expected the President to sign it into law. But, almost three months down the road, the President has not signed it. I am not sure whether the Attorney-General has advised him accordingly. But I would like to request the Attorney-General to request the President to sign that Bill in order to allow the TJRC to go to the districts that are affected by ...
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1 Jul 2010 in National Assembly:
On a point of order, Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir. Could I know from the Attorney-General who is the Head of Government and Head of State in this country? It can be only one person! The procedure, and the Attorney-General knows, is that once we do what we are supposed to do in this House, it is the work of the Government to do the rest.
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1 Jul 2010 in National Assembly:
On a point of order, Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir. You can see that the House is not satisfied. We are asking: This matter was concluded by this House on 18th April, 2010. It is now nearly three months since that time. Could the Attorney-General, for heavenâs sake, give us some timeline when he expects the President to sign the Bill? It is not so difficult for the Attorney-General to say that he will communicate that tomorrow and the President will sign it tomorrow. That is because there is reason why the President cannot sign that Bill into law.
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30 Jun 2010 in National Assembly:
On a point of order Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir. This matter has come to the House many times before. Actually, for the last three years, this Question has appeared almost every other time. The Minister has just confirmed that they have some support from development partners. We are very skeptical about that answer and the fact that this money might be diverted. Would I be in order to ask the Minister to lay on the Table the records of the partners that they have already engaged with so that we can believe what the Minister is telling the country ...
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30 Jun 2010 in National Assembly:
Could he lay on the Table what he has so that we could believe what he is telling the country? When will he complete this road? It has taken the Kenya Government 40 years to do this. Could he give us the timeline?
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29 Jun 2010 in National Assembly:
On a point of order, Mr. Temporary Deputy Speaker, Sir. Clearly, the Assistant Minister is out of order---
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