In 1903, the first settlers of European descent established themselves as large-scale farmers in the highlands by taking land from the Kikuyu, Masai, and others. At the same time, Indian merchants moved inland from the coast. In 1920, the territory was renamed and its administration changed; the interior became Kenya Colony and a coastal strip (10 mi/16 km wide) was constituted the Protectorate of Kenya. From the 1920s to the 40s, European settlers controlled the government and owned extensive farmlands; Indians maintained small trade establishments and were lower-level government employees; and Africans grew cash crops such as coffee and cotton on a small scale, were subsistence farmers, or were laborers in the towns (especially Nairobi). (Emphasis supplied)
For those who care to go beyond Wiki, the "Republic of Kenya" and "Dec. 12, 1964" (jeech!), here's some more details on Kenya and the ten mile coastal strip:
Muslims Relations with Politics of Nationalism and Secessionism in Kenya
http://www.irmgard-coninx-stiftung.de/fileadmin/user_upload/pdf/urbanplanet/collective_identities/Ndzovu_Essay.pdf
RE-DISTRIBUTION FROM ABOVE
The Politics of Land Rights and Squatting
in Coastal Kenya
http://www.nai.uu.se/publications/download.html/9171064648.pdf?id=24691
Kenya: Background and Introduction
http://ww2.unhabitat.org/publication/hs66702e/rr_chp5.pdf
Bottom LineIf you haven't seen it, ping over to Post 494 on the thread "Kenyan Birth Certificate - 1964 Divorce Timeline".
The Islamic secessionist movement in the 10 mile coastal strip of the British Protectorate leading up to and including 1964 is NOT in most text.
That area of land, which was part of what is now Coastal Province in Kenya where Mombasa lies, became independent on October 5, 1963 from an agreement in the exchange of letters between the Prime Ministers of Kenya and Zanzibar Messrs Jomo Kenyatta and M. Shamte.
It seems the Coastal Registrar's office started calling itself the "Republic of Kenya" BEFORE Dec. 12, 1964 to protect its rights and not be annexed by neighboring Zanzibar.
The facts still line up for the Kenyan birth certificate to be legitimate.
Sorry, but you can't get that from Wiki...