Opposition leaders launched bitter attacks against President Jacob Zuma as they got their first chance to reply to his State of the Nation Address last Thursday, which was disrupted by police entering the national assembly to evict lawmakers who accused him of corruption.
"You are not an honourable man," Mmusi Maimane, the parliamentary leader of the official opposition, the Democratic Alliance, told Zuma.
"You are a broken man presiding over a broken society," said Maimane, looking Zuma in the eye as he spoke from the podium.
When he complained that Zuma had laughed as lawmakers from the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) party were manhandled out of parliament, Zuma laughed again.
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Next up at the podium was EFF leader Julius Malema, described last week by the Speaker of parliament, Baleka Mbete, as a "cockroach".
The term has a terrible resonance in Africa after it was used to set Hutus against Tutsis in Rwanda's 1994 genocide.
Malema has said Mbete, who is also chairperson of the ruling African National Congress, was inciting people to kill him.
Dressed in the EFF's trademark red worksuit as he took to the podium, Malema called Zuma a "hooligan" for the tactics used to evict his MPs -- including "pulling us with our private parts".
"We are not scared of you," he warned a grinning Zuma.
"Whatever it takes, and however long it takes, by whatever revolutionary means, we will take over this country with the aim of total liberation and emancipation."
But, he said, that would be left until presidential question time on March 11 -- setting the stage for yet another parliamentary showdown.
South Africa's media have also been outraged by the scrambling of mobile phone signals in parliament ahead of last week's chaos, and have taken court action to prevent it happening again.