Negeri Sembilan—the nine that became one [1/NS]
Negeri Sembilan is Malaysia’s only state that elects its ruler. Here is the six-century machine behind the throne.
Read MoreNegeri Sembilan is Malaysia’s only state that elects its ruler. Here is the six-century machine behind the throne.
Read MoreUnendorsed by the highest court, the 'commonality' doctrine's crumbling bones still haunt Malaysian roads. Should they not be buried altogether?
Read MoreMalaysia has the laws to stop tariff-dodging — but one crucial piece is missing.
Read MoreTwo MPs have resigned late in Parliament’s term; the Constitution does not guarantee by-elections.
Read More(Or the Newcastle Vanishing Act). On 5 March 2026, Westminster passed a statute that quietly told 850 medical students in Johor their Newcastle degrees no longer counted in Britain. Why? Geography. If you have a child, a brother, or a wallet on the line, read on.
Read MoreI have always written here on the law. But today I wondered: “What is the law of life and death?” So I turned to a great sage. You might know him. Is this the answer? I merely repeat what he says. You decide what is right.
Read MoreYou are arguing a case. The court asks you to share a document. You try. Everything stalls. The screens freeze. The judges tap their fingers impatiently. Is there a faster, foolproof way to share PDFs over Zoom at hearings? Yes, there is.
Read MoreWhat if the people you trust with your property quietly sell it—and then insist the contract lets them? In a Singapore case about 14 vintage cars, the court reached for a centuries‑old “ghost” of English law called bailment. Can that ghost still decide modern disputes? If you ever leave anything in someone else’s hands, you should read this essay
Read MoreYour car is clamped. RM100 is demanded for its release. You pay, in anger. Can they do it? Can you sue the car-park owner? How?
Read MoreFor decades, one person in Putrajaya has worn two hats. He advises the government on how to stay in power. He decides who will be prosecuted and who will quietly walk away. Does the new “AG–PP split” Bill truly cut that cord, or simply dresses old political control in the language of 'reform'? Do you know what I think?
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