Politics
Member of Parliament Rolande Ngo Issi appointed to Supreme Judicial Council
Cabral Libii’s PCRN joins national governance alongside the RDPC following the appointment of Rolande Ngo Issi to Cameroon’s highest judicial body.
Cabral Libii’s PCRN has secured representation in Cameroon’s highest judicial body through the appointment of Rolande Ngo Issi, PCRN Member of Parliament for Nyong and Kellé, to the Supreme Judicial Council via presidential decree on June 2, 2026.
Other appointees include former Public Service Minister Sali Dahirou, Wouri RDPC MP Soppo Toute Marlyse, former Special Criminal Court vice-president Claude Francis Moukouri, Albert Ekono Nna, Engelbert Bengono, Christine Mekoulou Ngotty (spouse of Ngotty), Roger Sockeng, and others.
Born in Yaoundé on January 9, 1981, Rolande Ngo Issi holds dual roles as a Member of Parliament and alternate member of the Supreme Judicial Council—appointed by President Paul Biya. She serves as Deputy Secretary-General of the Cameroon Parliamentary Women’s Network, a PCRN national steering committee member, and Secretary-General of the PCRN’s Central Region delegation.
Since April 2016, she has led the National Consumer Movement (MNC).
Ngo Issi holds a master’s degree in Child Psychology from the University of Yaoundé 1 – Nkoa Ekele, a political science license from the University of Yaoundé 2 – Soa, and a diploma from the ENS (École Normale Supérieure).
In 2016, she was elected President of the Cameroon Consumer Movement, amassing thousands of followers on her social media platforms where she champions Cameroonian youth and entrepreneurship.
During the recent budget orientation debate, Ngo Issi questioned the feasibility of import substitution: “Import substitution caught my attention last year during the same exercise. Let’s be frank—what can the state truly achieve in six months without reliable electricity, stable internet, quality communication networks in the digital age, a burdensome and fragmented tax system, and fair justice?”
She also pressed the Finance Minister on delayed police promotions: “You’re surely aware that since 2017, no salary advancement has reached the police while promotions in the military occur automatically,” she noted.
Beyond politics, Ngo Issi is an entrepreneur and personal development coach. She previously spent 11 years as a teacher in rural areas.
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