All parliamentary appearances
Entries 1481 to 1490 of 2249.
-
2 Dec 2009 in National Assembly:
Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, given the urgency of the matter, this one can be availed on Tuesday, next week.
view
-
2 Dec 2009 in National Assembly:
Mr. Deputy Speaker, Sir, I will inform the Minister of State for Immigration and Registration of Persons to respond to the concerns to the House, and particularly the concerns of Mr. Affey.
view
-
2 Dec 2009 in National Assembly:
Thank you very much, Madam Temporary Deputy Speaker. We stand at a time in the history of this country when history must not be falsified. We stand at a time in the history of this country when records must speak for themselves. We stand at a time in this country when those who have held public office must be prepared to bear the weight of that public office and the actions they take when they are in public office. We stand at a time in the life of this country when we moralise from the high pedestal of self gratification ...
view
-
1 Dec 2009 in National Assembly:
Mr. Speaker, Sir, I beg to reply. (a) In response to the advertisement placed in two leading local dailies by a human resources consultant firm; Hawkins and Associates, for recruitment of the Director of the Kenya Medical Training College (KMTC), a total of 43 applications were received. After evaluation by the consultant, 18 candidates qualified for the interview. Of the 18 qualified candidates, 16 attended interviews held at the consultant s offices between Thursday 14th and Saturday 23rd May this year.
view
-
1 Dec 2009 in National Assembly:
Mr. Speaker, Sir, if I could satisfy both Mr. Olago---
view
-
1 Dec 2009 in National Assembly:
It says, âon the adviceâ but the Minister can choose to take or not to take the advice. I chose not to take the advice.
view
-
1 Dec 2009 in National Assembly:
Mr. Speaker, Sir, you realize that I was very detailed in giving you information on the people who were shortlisted and the scores they had. Those scores are not there for a show. They are there to guide the Minister on whether they passed the mark or not. The Minister could easily have put a benchmark that, âI will only appoint people who score more than 80 per centâ. Yes, because I am concerned about excellence and quality.
view
-
1 Dec 2009 in National Assembly:
Let me explain!
view
-
1 Dec 2009 in National Assembly:
The list did not come from my own head. The list came from the applicants to that position; the applications were received by the board. Let me go further. The board of management of the Kenya Medical Training College (KMTC) has had a lot of problems running that institution. As this process was going on, it was accompanied by the process of admitting students to that college, and it came to my attention that there was a history of mismanagement of the college by---
view
-
1 Dec 2009 in National Assembly:
If the hon. Member for Gichugu could be patient with me, I would explain to her why the Minister did not take the advice of the board on this issue. The Minister must appoint somebody who will run the college properly. The law says that there shall be a principal of the college who shall be appointed by the Minister on the advice of the board of management. Therefore there was a process.
view