The documentary concerns the death of Dilawar, an Afghan peanut farmer, who gave up farming to become a taxi driver and who died after several days of beating at
Bagram detention center. Dilawar left his home of
Yakubi in eastern
Afghanistan in the autumn of 2002, investing his family money in a new taxi to make money in a larger city. On 1 December 2002 he and three passengers were handed over to US military officials by a local Afghan warlord, accused of organising an attack on
Camp Salerno. The warlord was later found guilty of the attack himself, but had been ingratiating himself (for $1000 per person) by handing over alleged terrorists. Dilawar was held at the prison at
Bagram Air Base, and given the prisoner number BT421. Chained from the ceiling, he received multiple attacks on his thighs, a standard technique viewed as "permissible" and non-life-threatening. It is likely that the severe attack caused a blood clot which then killed him. His official death certificate created by the US military to pass to his family, with his body, was marked "
homicide". Medical conclusion stated that Dilawar's legs were "pulpified" and, had he lived, would have required amputation. The film explores the background of increasingly sanctioned torture following
9/11 in contravention of the
Geneva Convention and looks at the exposure of
Abu Ghraib. Interviews include
Tim Golden of
The New York Times who brought the case into the international spotlight, and
Moazzam Begg, a British citizen imprisoned at the same time, and witness to the events. Military interviewees include Damien Corsetti the main interrogator, and Sgt. Anthony Morden. Cpt
Christopher Beiring explains how he was the only person charged (charged with dereliction of duty). The documentary claims that of the over 83,000 people incarcerated by US forces in Afghanistan up to 2007, 93 percent were captured by local militiamen and exchanged for US bounty payments. Also that 105 detainees had died in captivity and that 37 of these deaths had been officially classified as homicides up to 2007. The film also looks at
Guantánamo Bay and how the same techniques were implemented there. ==Release==