(JAI:  What a man, what a human, what a hero, what a revolutionary.
History when we write it will be kind.)

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From: Portside <[email protected]>
Date: Sat, Jan 17, 2026 at 6:13 PM
Subject: Renfrew Christie Dies at 76; Sabotaged Racist Regime’s Nuclear
Program
To: <[email protected]>

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Renfrew Christie Dies at 76; Sabotaged Racist Regime’s Nuclear Program
<https://portside.org/2026-01-17/renfrew-christie-dies-76-sabotaged-racist-regimes-nuclear-program?utm_source=portside-general&utm_medium=email>


Adam Nossiter
January 14, 2026
The New York Times
<https://www.nytimes.com/2026/01/14/world/africa/renfrew-christie-dead.html>

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* He played a key role in ending apartheid South Africa’s secret weapons
program in the 1980s by helping the African National Congress bomb critical
facilities. *

Renfrew Christie in 1988. After Dr. Christie’s death,

President Cyril Ramaphosa (The elision
<https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyril_Ramaphosa#Business_career_(1996%E2%80%932014)>
is mine-JAI)
 of South Africa praised his “relentless and fearless commitment to our
freedom.”, Reuters



Renfrew Christie, a South African scholar whose undercover work for the
African National Congress was critical in hobbling the apartheid
government’s secret nuclear weapons program in the 1980s, died on Dec. 21
at his home in Cape Town. He was 76.

The cause of death was pneumonia, his daughter Camilla Christie said.

President Cyril Ramaphosa of South Africa paid tribute to Dr. Christie
after his death, saying
<https://www.sanews.gov.za/south-africa/condolences-prof-christie#:~:text=In%20the%20post%20on%20Tuesday,University%20of%20the%20Western%20Cape.>
his “relentless and fearless commitment to our freedom demands our
appreciation.”

The A.N.C., in a statement
<https://www.facebook.com/photo?fbid=1437598831054799&set=a.493996788748346>,
called Dr. Christie’s role “in disrupting and exposing the apartheid
state’s clandestine nuclear weapons program” an “act of profound
revolutionary significance.”

>From the doctoral dissertation he had written at the University of Oxford
on the history of electricity in South Africa, Dr. Christie provided the
research needed to blow up the Koeberg Nuclear Power Station; the Arnot
coal-fired power station; the Sasol oil-from-coal facilities that produced
the heavy water critical to producing nuclear weapons; and other critical
sites.

The explosions set back South Africa’s nascent nuclear weapons program by
years and cost the government more than $1 billion, Dr. Christie later
estimated.

By the time the bombs began going off, planted by his colleagues in
uMkhonto we Sizwe, the paramilitary wing of the A.N.C., Dr. Christie was
already in prison. He was arrested by South African authorities in October
1979 on charges of “terrorism,” three months after completing his studies
at Oxford, and spent the next seven years in prison, some of that time on
death row and in solitary confinement.

“While I was in prison, everything I had ever researched was blown up,” he
said <https://chimurengachronic.co.za/renfrew-christie/> in a speech in
2023.

Terrorism was a capital offense, and Dr. Christie narrowly escaped hanging.
But as he later recounted
<https://robertpaulwolff.blogspot.com/2013/12/an-important-guest-post-by-old-friend.html>,
he was deliberately placed on the death row closest to the gallows at the
Pretoria Maximum Security Prison. For two and half years, he was forced to
listen to the hangings of more than 300 prisoners.

“The whole prison would sing for two or three days before the hanging, to
ease the terror of the victims,” Dr. Christie recalled at a 2013 conference
at the University of the Western Cape on laws regarding torture.

Then he recited the lyrics of an anti‐apartheid folk song that reverberated
in the penitentiary: “‘Senzeni-na? Senzeni-na? What have we done? What have
we done?’ It was the most beautiful music on earth, sung in a vile place.”

“At zero dark hundred,” he continued, “the hanging party would come through
the corridors to the gallows, slamming the gates behind them on the road to
death. Once they were at the gallows there was a long pause. Then — crack!
— the trapdoors would open, and the neck or necks of the condemned would
snap. A bit later came the hammering, presumably of nails into the coffins.”

In an interview <https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/w3csvtw1> years later
with the BBC, he said the “gruesome” experience affected him for the rest
of his life.

Dr. Christie acquired his fierce antipathy to apartheid at a young age,
growing up in an impoverished family in Johannesburg.

Many of his family members fought with the Allied forces against the
Germans in World War II, and “I learned from them very early that what one
does with Nazis is kill them,” he said
<https://www.researchgate.net/publication/398985759_Excerpts_from_a_Conversation_with_Renfrew_Christie_and_Rodney_Wilkinson_during_the_Conference_on_&apos;Anti-Nuclear_Activism_in_Africa_A_Historical_Perspective&apos;_held_at_the_Johannesburg_Institute_for_Advan/link/694a41ff0c98040d482075ca/download?_tp=eyJjb250ZXh0Ijp7ImZpcnN0UGFnZSI6InB1YmxpY2F0aW9uIiwicGFnZSI6InB1YmxpY2F0aW9uIn19>
at a 2023 conference on antinuclear activism in Johannesburg. “I am not a
pacifist.”

At 17, he was drafted into the South African Army. A stint of guard duty at
the Lenz ammunition dump south of Johannesburg confirmed his suspicions
that the government was building nuclear weapons. “From the age of 17, I
was hunting the South African bomb,” he said at the conference.

After attending the University of the Witwatersrand, he received a
scholarship to Oxford, which enabled him to further his quest. For his
doctoral dissertation, he chose to study South Africa’s history of
electrification, “so I could get into the electricity supply commission’s
library and archives, and work out how much electricity they were using to
enrich uranium,” he told the BBC.

>From there, it was possible to calculate how many nuclear bombs could be
produced. Six such bombs had reportedly
<https://www.nytimes.com/1993/03/25/world/south-africa-says-it-built-6-atom-bombs.html>
been made by the end of apartheid in the early 1990s; the United States had
initially aided the regime’s nuclear program. Thanks to the system of
forced labor, South Africa “made the cheapest electricity in the world,”
Dr. Christie said, which aided the process of uranium enrichment and made
the country’s nuclear program a magnet for Western support. (South Africa
also benefited from its status as a Cold War ally against the Soviet Union.)

Dr. Christie turned his findings over to the A.N.C. Instead of opting for
the safety of England — there was the possibility of a lecturer position at
Oxford — he returned home and was arrested by South Africa’s Security
Police. He had been betrayed
<https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article/farewell-to-a-south-african-hero-professor-renfrew-christie/>
by Craig Williamson, a fellow student at Witwatersrand, who had become a
spy for the security services and was later granted amnesty by South
Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission.

After 48 hours of torture, Dr. Christie wrote a forced confession — “the
best thing I ever wrote,” he later told the BBC, noting that he had made
sure the confession included “all my recommendations to the African
National Congress” about the best way to sabotage Koeberg and other
facilities.

“And, gloriously, the judge read it out in court,” Dr. Christie added. “So
my recommendations went from the judge’s mouth” straight to the A.N.C.

Two years later, in December 1982, Koeberg was bombed by white A.N.C.
operatives who had gotten jobs at the facility. They followed Dr.
Christie’s instructions to the letter.

“Of all the achievements of the armed struggle, the bombing of Koeberg is
there,” Dr. Christie said at the 2023 conference, emphasizing its
importance. “Frankly, when I got to hearing of it, it made being in prison
much, much easier to tolerate.”

Renfrew Leslie Christie was born in Johannesburg on Sept. 11, 1949, the
only child of Frederick Christie, an accountant, and Lindsay (Taylor)
Christie, who was soon widowed and raised her son alone while working as a
secretary.

He attended King Edward VII School in Johannesburg and was conscripted into
the army immediately after graduating. After his discharge, he enrolled at
Witwatersrand. He was twice arrested after illegally visiting Black
students at the University of the North at Turfloop, and was also arrested
during a march on a police station where he said the anti-apartheid
activist Winnie Mandela
<https://www.nytimes.com/2018/04/02/world/africa/winnie-mandela-dead.html>
was being tortured.

He didn’t finish the course at Witwatersrand, instead earning bachelor’s
and master’s degrees from the University of Cape Town in the mid-1970s
before studying at Oxford. At Cape Town, he was a leader of the National
Union of South African Students, an important anti-apartheid organization.

On June 6, 1980, he was sentenced
<https://sahistory.org.za/people/renfrew-leslie-christie> to 10 years in
prison under South Africa’s Terrorism Act, with four other sentences of
five years each to run concurrently.

“I spent seven months in solitary,” Dr. Christie said in the 2023 speech.
“Don’t let anybody kid you: No one comes out of solitary sane. My
nightmares are awful.”

After his years in prison, he was granted amnesty in 1986 as the apartheid
regime began to crumble. (It officially ended in 1994, when Nelson Mandela
<https://www.nytimes.com/2013/12/06/world/africa/nelson-mandela_obit.html>
became the country’s first Black president.) He later had a long academic
career at the University of the Western Cape, retiring in 2014 as dean of
research
<https://www.dailymaverick.co.za/article/farewell-to-a-south-african-hero-professor-renfrew-christie/>
and senior professor.

In addition to his daughter Camilla, he is survived by his wife, Dr. Menán
du Plessis, a linguist and novelist he married in 1990; and another
daughter, Aurora.

Asked by the BBC whether he was glad he had spied for the A.N.C., Dr.
Christie didn’t hesitate.

“I was working for Nelson Mandela and uMkonto we Sizwe,” he said. “I’m very
proud of that. We won. We got a democracy.”

Kirsten Noyes contributed research.Adam Nossiter
<https://www.nytimes.com/by/adam-nossiter> has been bureau chief in Kabul,
Paris, West Africa and New Orleans and is now a writer on the Obituaries
desk.

   - apartheid
   <https://portside.org/apartheid?utm_source=portside-general&utm_medium=email>
   - South Africa
   
<https://portside.org/south-africa?utm_source=portside-general&utm_medium=email>
   - African National Congress
   
<https://portside.org/african-national-congress?utm_source=portside-general&utm_medium=email>


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