Control orders should be scrapped in an urgent overhaul of counter-terrorism legislation, campaigners have said.
Liberty will recommend that the "unsafe and unfair" control order regime, used to place terror suspects under close supervision, should be "scrapped entirely".
The civil liberties group said the Government's review of counter-terrorism legislation was a "once in a generation opportunity for reform" and will unveil its full response to the consultation later.
The campaign group also said the current stop-and-search powers were also "too broad" and were being used disproportionately against photographers.
Urgent changes are needed to ensure the powers "only apply to those who intend to use the photographs for the purposes of terrorism", Liberty said.
The campaigners described the pre-charge detention of terror suspects as "shamefully long" and an "egregious breach of the UK's human rights obligations". The 28-day period "needs to be considered afresh and the period reduced to a proportionate level", they said.