
DATUK Mah Weng Kwai has now crossed a line that demands a response — not from others, but from himself. At the Bar Council’s recent forum, he publicly claimed that while sitting on a Court of Appeal bench, he received a call from a Federal Court judge informing him that one of the litigants was a “friend” of the judge.
Mah framed this as a troubling anecdote about interference — yet stopped short of naming the judge, clarifying the year, explaining whether the case proceeded, or whether any complaint was ever filed. It was an allegation without accountability, a grenade rolled into public discourse with the pin still in his hand.
And now, he must choose.
No More Hints, No More Games
If Mah truly believes that call was improper, he has a duty — not an option — to name the judge. His failure to do so does not make him a whistleblower. It makes him complicit. Complicit in protecting a potential wrongdoer. Complicit in allowing the public to speculate wildly about the integrity of Federal Court judges, past and present. Complicit in undermining trust in the judiciary without providing a shred of actionable proof.
What kind of former judge makes such a serious claim in a public forum, only to hide behind vagueness when pressed for accountability? A man seeking attention? A man chasing applause? Or worse, a man playing politics with the reputation of others?
Silence is Not Neutral — It is Damage
By staying silent, Mah is not protecting the institution — he is damaging it. Every judge who has served on the Federal Court bench is now unfairly shadowed by suspicion. The public is left guessing. The legal community is left divided. And the credibility of the Judiciary is left hanging, simply because one man wanted to drop a suggestive anecdote at a public event without the courage to follow through.
Mah’s silence is not principled restraint. It is institutional sabotage.
The Honourable Path Forward
There are only two paths left:
(1) Name the judge, present the facts, and let the proper authorities investigate.
(2) Admit that the comment was inappropriate, irresponsible, and publicly apologise for the damage caused.
Anything less is an act of cowardice — and a betrayal of the very judicial integrity he claims to defend.
Dato’ Mah Weng Kwai can no longer play both sides of this line. If he chooses silence, then he must be prepared to have his own legacy viewed not as a guardian of justice, but as a purveyor of innuendo and division.
The Judiciary deserves better. So does the public. And so should he.
*The writer is an advocate and solicitor, and actively involved in legal and constitutional discourse in Malaysia








