Pictures of Kenyan military tanks rolling into Somalia. Defence Minister Yusuf Haji flanked by his internal security counterpart George Saitoti and Police Commissioner Mathew Iteere explain the incursion. Unsmiling generals wag fingers at a live press briefing. Pictures of soldiers distributing relief food to starving Somalis. Female soldiers at the 'frontline'. President Kibaki declares operation will go on until al-Shabaab militia is vanquished. TV reporters in helmets and bullet proof vests report from the 'frontline'...National media coverage of Kenya's invasion of Somalia all comes from a single source - the military, writes Henry Makori. No wonder there seems to be so little opposition to the war
These are the daily media images of the Kenyan war in Somalia. A clean war. Not a drop of blood. There have been frequent reports of killings of al-Shabaab militiamen and bombing of their bases. But no one has seen any images of the 'frontline gains' as NTV once described the army's progress.
The headlines on TV and in the newspapers have been entirely celebratory since the fighting began on 16 October 2011 - except on those days when suspected retaliatory grenade attacks rocked Nairobi; the media has played down subsequent grenade attacks in other parts of the country.
Here's a small selection from the front pages of Kenya's two leading dailies, Nation and Standard, over the past month: 'Nine shabaab men killed in fierce clash near border town' (Nation); Kenya's fearsome arsenal in offensive' (Standard); 'Al-Qaeda camp hit by Kenya's jets and ships' (Nation); 'Kenya enters next phase in operation' (Standard); 'Allies hunt shabaab fighters door-to-door (Nation); 'We will fight on to victory, vows Kibaki' (Nation); 'UN to punish al shabaab allies' (Standard); 'Spirits high as navy kills 18 shabaab' (Standard)...
All the information carried in these stories - and many others on TV, radio and on websites - is from a single source: The military. No attempt has been made to verify independently the stories. The army holds frequent news conferences in Nairobi, but most of the time the media relies on emails and tweets from Kenya Defence Forces spokesman, Major Emmanuel Chirchir. There must be no other view of the war.