Vincent Musyoka Musau

Parties & Coalitions

  • Not a member of any parties or coalitions

All parliamentary appearances

Entries 21 to 30 of 127.

  • 17 Oct 2018 in National Assembly: There is a lot of disruption. Since I only have three minutes, I just want to conclude my remarks on this Motion. view
  • 17 Oct 2018 in National Assembly: In support, we need to ask ourselves the hard questions like whether the problem in this country, which is facing the youth, is really about creation of more funds or prudent management of the existing opportunities for the youth. view
  • 17 Oct 2018 in National Assembly: One would want to ask about the impact of the youth fund. What has been the impact of the Uwezo Fund? Where did we go wrong? The Access to Government Procurement The electronic version of the Official Hansard Report is for information purposes only. Acertified version of this Report can be obtained from the Hansard Editor. view
  • 17 Oct 2018 in National Assembly: Opportunities (AGPO) provides a very huge opportunity for youth in this country, but we need to ask ourselves what the problem is. There is likely to be no bigger opportunity for the youth in this country than the one created by AGPO. For a development budget of Kshs1 trillion, it means an opportunity of Kshs300 billion through tenders for the youth through AGPO, but this has faced a lot of challenges. One of the major challenges is infiltration by cartels. Rich and big people pose as youths, take advantage of the youth and secure the opportunities. As a Government, we ... view
  • 3 Oct 2018 in National Assembly: Thank you. Let me start by referring to a conversation I had yesterday with some of my youth in the market. I just stopped by and in our discussions, I told them they needed to stop chewing miraa and, if they have to, then they need to remember the slogan that was used by Tusker beer a long time ago that says: “ Baada ya kazi,burudika na Tusker” One of them asked me: “ Baada ya kazi gani? ”. Now, that takes you to the weight of this matter that, basically, the youth are so un-engaged that preventing them to ... view
  • 3 Oct 2018 in National Assembly: Let me join the other Members by describing youth and unemployment as a time bomb. The most productive age is during the youth. The wealth of a country is not in its minerals or infrastructure. It is how well the country taps into its own human resource. Look at what happened to South Korea which, at one point, was way below Kenya. But it is now miles ahead. It is one of the most developed countries in the world. During one of the visits to Korea, I asked one of the Koreans how they managed to get to where they ... view
  • 3 Oct 2018 in National Assembly: the system. There is a big percentage of the youth who are willing to work but, unfortunately, they are jobless. This threatens the future of individuals and the economy at large. view
  • 12 Apr 2018 in National Assembly: Thank you, Hon. Speaker for giving me this opportunity. At the outset, I would like to say that I had the opportunity to look at this Bill two times. I, first, looked at it during the last Parliament, when it was returned to Parliament with Presidential reservations. I looked at it for the second time while in the Departmental Committee on Energy. Therefore I have had the opportunity to look at it exhaustively. view
  • 12 Apr 2018 in National Assembly: This is a long awaited Bill because it lays the framework for early exportation of oil. As we speak, we have oil that can be exported, but there lacks a framework and law to enable this to take place. The Big Four Agenda cannot survive without energy as a driver. Energy is required in quantity, reliability and also in terms of cost- effectiveness. This Bill together with the Energy Bill will go a long way in creating an enabling environment to allow investors to invest and also allow the country to have amounts of energy that are required to spur ... view
  • 12 Apr 2018 in National Assembly: This honourable House represents Kenyans. The honourable Members need to go far in creating goodwill because it is not just about this particular resource. Maybe tomorrow we are going to find another resource and we need public goodwill. This Bill proposes to create an authority to manage issues to do with upstream petroleum but you will have noted that with the Energy Bill we have dispensed with, we have Energy Regulatory Commission (ERC). It is our feeling as a Committee that there is no point duplicating it. Tomorrow we are going to have another nuclear authority or another potential source ... view

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