@ nanfor1, some more food for thought.
According to lawyer Paul Mwangi, who was interviewed on Citizen TV last night, the basis of the court case whose ruling we are debating, was based on the draft of the 2005 proposed constitution and the defendant was the ECK. The draft was defeated in the 2005 referendum and since then ECK has ceased to exist. Therefore the case was overtaken by events.
Secondly, the 10 mile coastal strip was not part of Kenya before independence but was ruled as a protectorate since 1895 by the British on behalf of the Sultan of Zanzibar. The agreement at independence which was executed and signed by the Sultan of Zanzibar and the PM at the time Jomo Snr. was that the strip will be part of Kenya as long as these Kadhi courts are allowed to continue.
Now if they have been declared illegal, does the strip revert back to Zanzibar? Note that on this particular issue, it matters not where the Kadhi courts are captured, but they need to be somewhere.