No screwdriver as a seal puller. You'll nick the fork once and there is your leak. Where Paul is pointing to, looks like the whole lower fork has a bullet end, no allen access hole, just the split for the pinch bolt. So maybe it's back to the top of the fork and remove that top cap nut. You'll have to fill the oil back up somewhere, so since you need to remove the cap, it might be the cap screwed onto the rod. Once the cap nut is off you can slide the tube down. Remove the cap off the shaft via double nutting. Then begin to pull the fork tube from the leg like you're pumping a shotgun... so you keep doing this till seal walks out of the leg. I could be wrong. And too, it looks like the fork seal C-ring is removed?
Shadetree Seal Installer:
1. With a screwdriver shaft, let the old seal rest on the shaft. With gloves on, we move next to the grinding wheel.
2. Let the seal spin off the shaft and note how much rubber leaves the OD of the seal. Stop and test.
3. The test is to let the seal drop back into the fork leg and then turn it upside down so it falls out... you just made half the installer.
4. Walk into a plumbing store like Meguyveer and veer to the pipe diameter that will slide over the fork leg, but not wide enough to drop past the fork leg, but rest on the leg's seal receiver diameter, and too, where the ground down seal won't be stuck in the ID of the plumbing pipe.
5. Buy the wide blue paint tape so you can tape tube so you do not nick the leg with the homemade installer.
6. The tube will probably drop down into the leg and that says the sliding part won't be nicked; is to install the seal this way, rather than install the cap so the leg is fully extended = Nicks galore! You save the finish of the tube at both ends with the tube drop and tape.
7. Lead fishing weights tape around the plumbing pipe acts as a large hammer blow so the seal slides down the leg with less pounding.
8. The seal has to move past the ring lock groove remember. Run the lock ring over the tube rather than spread and scratch the tube with the ring.
The oil fill is what weight and how many ounces is up to the shop manual and/or you [weight wise that is].