UPDATE 1-Malaysia court keeps Lynas operating licence on hold

* Court postpones decision on license until Oct 10

* Company says postponement leaves operating license on hold

* Shares fall 6 percent from level before decision

(Adds confirmation from Lynas, activist comments, share price fall)

KUALA LUMPUR, Oct 4 (Reuters) - A Malaysian court kept on hold the licence granted to Lynas Corp Ltd's controversial rare earth plant by delaying until Oct. 10 a decision on whether it will consider judicial reviews to permanently block production.

The Australian company said that the Kuantan High Court's decision leaves the temporary operating licence suspended until Oct. 10, extending a one-week halt that expired on Thursday.

The rare earth plant - the biggest outside China - has been ready to fire up since early May, but the company has been embroiled in environmental and safety disputes with local residents since construction began two years ago.

The plant is considered important to breaking China's grip on the processing of rare earths, which are used in products ranging from smartphones to hybrid cars.

Activists linked to the environmental group Save Malaysia Stop Lynas, who had asked for the postponement, want the court to suspend the temporary license until two judicial review cases challenging the government's decision allowing the plant to operate are heard.

Shares in the firm fell 1.2 percent to $0.845 at 0454 GMT, down 6 percent from where they stood before the court decision.

"We're staying optimistic," Tan Bun Teet, a spokesman for the group, told Reuters after the court decision.

"The court has set an early hearing for Oct. 10 and it looks like they want to resolve it quickly," he added.

The group's previous attempts to stop the plant had failed.

Lynas received a temporary operating license for the long-delayed $800 million rare earth plant early in September, enabling it to start production as early as October.

Protests over possible radioactive residue have drawn thousands of people and the project has become a hot topic ahead of an election that must be held by early next year.

(Reporting By Siva Sithraputhran; Additional reporting by Maggie Lu in Sydney; Editing by Michael Urquhart)

((Siva.Sithraputhran@thomsonreuters.com)(+603 23338019))

Keywords: LYNAS MALAYSIA/