Kenya's High Court today suspended key parts of a controversial new national security law pending a full examination of the legislation.
High Court Judge George Odunga announced that the application of eight sections of the new anti-terrorism law would be suspended because they raised concerns over human rights.
The move follows a legal challenge by Kenya's opposition, who had argued that the east African nation was at risk of becoming a dictatorship.
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It hands Kenyan authorities sweeping powers to crack down on terror suspects - including holding suspects for nearly a year without charge - and threatens journalists with up to three years behind bars if their reports "undermine investigations or security operations relating to terrorism".
The suspended clauses include the threat to journalists, a ceiling on the number of refugees allowed to be in Kenya, as well as definitions on what constitutes support for terrorism.
The government argues the measures are necessary to confront a wave of attacks by Somalia's Al Qaeda-affiliated Shebab insurgents, and that amendments giving the courts more oversight over the police and intelligence services make it constitutionally sound.