Opposition parties say Botswana president's challenge to vice president vote is intimidation
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Opposition parties in Botswana say the president is undermining the role of parliament after he challenged the process of electing a vice president.
The Umbrella for Democratic Change said Tuesday that President Ian Khama's request that members of parliament elect a vice president by a show of hands was a form of intimidation. Khama and the ruling Botswana Democratic Party were re-elected in last month's general election.
Last week, the president's lawyers approached the attorney general to petition the court to change the voting process from a secret ballot. In Botswana, publicly elected members of parliament select the vice president, speaker and deputy speaker. October's election resulted in the highest number of seats won by the opposition.
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Botswana's court will decide this week whether a show of hands is constitutional.