Cameroon approves role of vice president to 93-year-old Biya


FILE PHOTO: Cameroon President Paul Biya attends the Paris Peace Forum, France, November 12, 2019. REUTERS/Charles Platiau/File Photo

DAKAR, April ⁠4 (Reuters) - Cameroon's parliament on Saturday overwhelmingly approved a constitutional amendment to reintroduce the ⁠position of vice president, a measure the government says will ensure continuity but ‌which the opposition say will consolidate executive power.

In a joint session of the ruling party-dominated National Assembly and Senate, lawmakers voted 200 to 18 in favour, with four abstentions, to pass the bill.

The bill stipulates that ​the vice president will automatically assume the presidency if ⁠President Paul Biya dies, resigns, or ⁠becomes incapacitated.

Biya, 93, has led the oil- and cocoa-producing Central African country since 1982 and ⁠is ‌the world's oldest serving head of state. Public discussion about his health is banned.

According to the legislation, a copy of which was seen by Reuters, the ⁠vice president will be appointed and dismissed by the president, ​serving for the remainder ‌of the president's seven-year term.

However, the interim leader would be prohibited from initiating ⁠constitutional changes or ​running in a subsequent election.

The government has argued that the reform is intended to safeguard institutional stability in case of a sudden leadership vacancy. Biya has 15 days to promulgate the bill.

Critics, ⁠including opposition lawmakers, argue the amendment weakens democratic institutions ​and exacerbates centralisation.

Joshua Osih, a member of parliament and chairman of the opposition Social Democratic Front, said the changes were a missed opportunity to boost national unity and democratic governance ⁠in the nation torn by a civil conflict since 2017.

"This text weakens legitimacy, reinforces centralisation, and ignores a major historical grievance," Osih said, calling instead for a system where the president and vice president are jointly elected, reflecting Cameroon's origins as a union of ​British and French-administered territories.

The reintroduction of the vice presidency marks ⁠Cameroon's first major constitutional revision since 2008 when presidential term limits were scrapped in a move ​that sparked nationwide protests, which were met with a ‌violent crackdown by security forces.

The vice presidency ​was previously part of Cameroon's governance structure but was abolished in 1972 following a constitutional referendum.

(Reporting by Amindeh Blaise AtabongEditing by Bate Felix and Alison Williams)

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