Nicole Hughes
February 27, 2008 |
7:51 pm EST
“Taxi to the Dark Side” won the Oscar for Best Documentary last weekend, and is a brutal and methodical investigation of torture and interrogation policies in America’s “war on terror.” Over 100 prisoners have died in US custody, with the military itself reporting 37 of those deaths as homicides. Additionally, only seven percent of prisoners at Guantanamo Bay have been apprehended by US military personnel. The rest have been turned in by bounty hunters, warlords, and others with agendas completely unrelated to the US war on terror.
Filmmaker Alex Gibney parallels a disturbing investigation into the abuses at Bagram, Abu Ghraib and Guantanamo with an in-depth look at the apprehension and eventual murder of an innocent taxi driver, Dilawar, who was accused of a crime by the very man who committed it. The film contains uncensored footage of the Bagram base and shows interviews with interrogators, guards, and other military personnel, while examining the roles of key figures in the Bush administration in refuting the Geneva Conventions and the embracing of torture as the weapon of choice in the war against terrorism.
Check out the trailer below, then
and get involved with Amnesty International’s various campaigns to protest torture and unlawful detentions.
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Filed under:
Ethics • Human Rights
Related Links:
The Penal Colony
Guantanamo Has a Giftshop
Sarah’s Social Action Snapshot: Human Rights Now
“Standard Operating Procedure” news
Life as a Guantanamo Detainee
Tagged as:80th annual oscars • Abu Ghraib • Alex Gibney • Amnesty International • Bagram • Bagram base • Best Documentary • Dilawar • Geneva Conventions • Gitmo • Guantanamo • Guantanamo Bay • Oscar for Best Documentary • oscar winner best documentary • oscar winners • Taxi to the Dark Side • Torture • US military • war against terrorism • war on terror
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