A simple glance at the top left of the offending document tells all. Forget the folds, the numbers, the names, the "republic" shit.
"7s. 6d." stands for something: the cost of the registration. 7 Shillings and 6 pennies (the short form of which used to be, d.)
Now you might say... British colony, they used the same currency denoms. That would be an incorrect assumption. Most colonial countries did use the same penny denomination, but not Kenya.
Kenya used (East African) Schillings and Cents. When they became a republic they adopted... Kenyan Shillings and Cents.
Shillings and cents would have used a 7s. 50c. denomination, and not the 7s. 6d. shown in the forgery.
The currency was not only unique to Kenya but a widespread regional currency. The currency was not only widespread but long-lived, lasting in Kenya as a standard for more than forty years.
The question that has to be asked isn't a name, date or number that may or may not easily be verified, but more pertinently, "Why is this official form using an incorrect denomination?"
I know, Birthers will ignore obvious fact, but this is a very difficult question to answer, and not something open to interpretation.
We have to be asking the question, why are you producing obvious forgeries, over and over and over... just as the swift boaters did to CBS.
Go on the attack.