Sabina Wanjiru Chege

Parties & Coalitions

Sabina Wanjiru Chege

Sabina Chege is a woman of many talents and used to be an actor at Kenya National Theatre. She served as a radio presenter for many years where she addressed development and women issues. Transforming people is her passion.

All parliamentary appearances

Entries 2331 to 2340 of 2784.

  • 8 Jul 2015 in National Assembly: Thank you, Hon. Speaker. Is it in order for the hon. Member to mislead this House? When the regulations on school fees were gazetted, the minimum school fees was not to be Kshs50,000; that was the maximum for national schools and there were other amounts for the other categories of schools. The hon. Member has just misled this House by saying that Kaimenyi said that the minimum was Kshs50,000. That is not the truth. She is a Member of my committee, and it is a shame for her to mislead this House. view
  • 7 Jul 2015 in National Assembly: Thank you, Hon. Temporary Deputy Speaker. I appreciate this chance. On behalf of women of Murang’a County and central Kenya at large, I want to thank His Excellency the President for this initiative. This is not a laughing matter. It is a serious matter. I want to report that for the last three or four days, women have been happy. The main problem that I saw is that we have our own people who want to make money by killing others. I want to commend Hon. Waititu and Hon. Alice Ng’ang’a from Thika for starting this fight. view
  • 7 Jul 2015 in National Assembly: We have one factory that has messed the young people of Mt. Kenya and that is Vine Park. When we went pouring this illicit brew, we poured it and you could light fire with it. It is deadly. I would like to tell this House that we also need to vet the work of the NACADA because when we went to raid some of those bars, we found that they had licenses from the NACADA and the Kenya Bureau of Standards (KEBS). I also want to urge all the county governments to suspend all the licences until the people or ... view
  • 10 Jun 2015 in National Assembly: Thank you, Hon. Speaker. I want to thank the entire House for supporting this Report. We have sat in many sittings with those retired The electronic version of the Official Hansard Report is for information purposesonly. A certified version of this Report can be obtained from the Hansard Editor. view
  • 10 Jun 2015 in National Assembly: teachers. My prayer is that the Government will honour the requests and the prayer from the Committee and this Report so that these retired teachers are paid their dues. I thank you, Hon. Speaker. view
  • 10 Jun 2015 in National Assembly: Sorry, Hon. Speaker. I move. view
  • 10 Jun 2015 in National Assembly: I beg to move. Thank you, Hon. Speaker. view
  • 10 Jun 2015 in National Assembly: Thank you, Hon. Temporary Deputy Speaker. I support this Bill. I have gone through the Bill and there are several things that I like about what is being proposed. Several Kenyans have gone out there, have been arrested and their relatives are not able to see them. Prison is not supposed just to be a way of punishing a criminal, but a place where somebody is supposed to be corrected and he or she changes. Therefore, if the sole purpose of somebody being to prison is not just to be punished, then there are several rights that should be looked ... view
  • 10 Jun 2015 in National Assembly: The Bill proposes that if somebody is to be given the transfer, he or she cannot appeal the case when they transfer or when they come back to Kenya. That is a very good way of trying to curb corruption. We know that some people can come from another country, come here and appeal their cases and they are let go by our courts. They can also go to their countries and appeal. I like the provision that a person cannot appeal. view
  • 10 Jun 2015 in National Assembly: Hon. Temporary Deputy Speaker, I like the part which says that a person cannot appeal for the case when they are given that kind of a transfer. This is a very good way forward. I hope that we can speed up its passage, so that Kenyan citizens who are suffering out there, without seeing their families, can be allowed to come back home. view

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