|
Back to Index
Prime Minister's welcome address for Odinga
Morgan Tsvangirai, MDC
April 29, 2011
The Right Honourable
Prime Minister of the Republic of Kenya, Mr. Raila Odinga
Members of the National Standing Committee
Members of the National Executive and Council
Representatives of the Trade Unions and Civil Society
Members of the Diplomatic Corp,
Invited Guests,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
Comrades and Friends,
Ladies and Gentlemen, our party and indeed Zimbabwe,
is blessed and chosen.
It is with great pleasure that I welcome to this
historic Congress, our beloved brother, Comrade, an Icon and Friend
of our struggle, The Right Honourable Prime Minister of the Republic
of Kenya, Mr. Raila Odinga.
Prime Minister Odinga was born on January 7, 1945,
in Maseno, Kisumu District, Nyanza Province. He has served as a
Member of Parliament for Langata since 1992, was Minister of Energy
from 2001 to 2002, and was Minister of Roads, Public Works and Housing
from 2003 to 2005.
He was the main opposition candidate in the disputed
2007 presidential election. The Right Honourable Prime Minister
Odinga took office in April 2008 and served as a supervisor of a
national unity coalition government.
Prime Minister
Odinga is the son of the first Vice President of Kenya, Jaramogi
Oginga Odinga; Raila's brother, Oburu Odinga, is also currently
a Member of Parliament (MP).
Out of the 2007 elections, his party, ODM, got 99 out of 210 seats
in the parliament, making the ODM the single largest party in parliament.
Right Honourable Prime Minister, we in the people's party
of excellence, MDC and indeed all Zimbabweans, are proud to have
you at this Congress.
The people's party of excellence, MDC, the
majority party in parliament today, is a pro-poor, people-centred
social democratic and non-racial movement.
We believe in Constitutionalism, the rule of law
and the respect for all the basic freedoms that make a society vibrant.
These are the rights that we in Zimbabwe are fighting to enjoy.
Mr Prime Minister, I can assure you that the struggle
of the people of the Republic of Kenya and Zimbabwe is the same.
And indeed we share the same goal and objective,
that is, to democratize Africa and to make our motherland successful
and prosperous and to be counted among many.
We have seen in recent years the rise of post-liberation
parties, in Kenya, Zimbabwe and recently in Ivory Coast. This is
a sign of generational transformation, the rise of a new group of
African leaders concerned with the welfare and future of their people.
A new group of leaders that forms new, dynamic partnerships
and embraces new technology to improve the lives of their people.
You are one such leader Mr Prime Minister and we
thank you for joining us today at this historic Congress.
With these few remarks, it is my singular honour
and privilege to invite you, Right Honourable Prime Minister Odinga
to take the floor.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|