Through a series of videos shared on various media platforms and news agencies, the film carefully frames a sequence of events leading up to the June 29, 2021 massacre before opening the door into its main chapter, the stories of the victims and survivors of the brutality of the armed forces, narrated in their own voices.
[3] It was directed by Comfort Ndzinisa, which he also executively produced with Manqoba Nxumalo in Association with Eswatini Solidarity Fund, a relief organisation formed during the peak of the unrest.
[6] There was an outrage over the accounts of the survivors in the documentary which intensified the second wave of the unrest since the government was denying the use of live ammunition on unarmed civilians.
However, given that the documentary was released in the heart of the unrest, it was highly unlikely to have played on a local platform, given the human rights situation had deteriorated sharply.
[11] The documentary also won the 2022 Audience Choice Award category in Melbourne Lift-Off Global Network film festival.