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O’Sullivan’s walkout a ‘calculated act of defiance’, says Analyst

todayFebruary 27, 2026 71

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Legal and governance expert, Leo Maphosa, says forensic investigator Paul O’Sullivan’s decision to walk out of Parliament’s Ad-Hoc committee was a calculated act of defiance within a constitutional forum.

O’Sullivan left yesterday’s proceedings during a heated exchange with Members of Parliament probing allegations of corruption and political interference within the country’s criminal justice system.

The controversial forensic investigator told MPs that he came before the commission voluntarily and was not subpoenaed.

“Telling me I’m going to be arrested, I can’t leave, that’s rubbish. I came here voluntarily; I didn’t come here under a summons or anything like that. People seem to make up their own rules as they go along, you know,” O’Sullivan said.

Maphosa argues that once an individual appeared before Parliament, takes an oath and then decides mid-proceeding that the rules no longer apply to them, that is not inconvenience, that is confrontation with the authority of the state.

“Parliament has to be understood for what it is. It’s not a talk shop,” Maphosa said. “It’s not a debating society that one attends at leisure. It’s a constitutionally empowered oversight body, armed by Section 56 of the Constitution, with the authority to summon, question, and place witnesses under oath. And that oath is not decorative.”

The think tank says that while some say O’Sullivan’s conduct was harmless, constitutional compliance is not measured by how many questions are answered, but by respect for the process.

“You do not get to decide mainstream which parts of accountability will entertain and which will discard. The rule of law does not operate on personal convenience. It operates on institutional authority,” Maphosa added.

“Institutions erode slowly, not in explosions, but in moments where defiance is tolerated. When a witness under oath walks out without authorisation, and nothing follows, the message is unmistakable. Parliamentary oversight is negotiable.”

Maphosa added that Parliament is not just a symbolic theatre. He warned that if Parliament fails to act, it could set a dangerous precedent, arguing that institutions erode not in dramatic moments, but when acts of defiance are tolerated.

“Precedent teaches the next witness how far they can push. Precedent signals whether constitutional parties have teeth or merely gums. If there are consequences in some accountability forums for refusing to submit to questioning, as you might have seen in the Zuma matter, those consequences cannot evaporate when the setting changes,” Maphosa said.

“In this country, displays of open defiance towards democratic institutions do not occur in a vacuum. They land in a society with a long history of unequal consequences. When someone can sit under oath, rise and live in full view of the nation without immediate restraint, many citizens do not see a procedural hiccup.”

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    O’Sullivan’s walkout a ‘calculated act of defiance’, says Analyst Lindiwe Mpanza

Meanwhile, the Economic Freedom Fighters (EFF) laid criminal charges against O’Sullivan at the Cape Town Central Police Station on Friday.

The party says O’Sullivan’s is in contempt of Parliament, arguing that his actions constitute a criminal offence that could result in a fine, imprisonment, or both, with the penalties potentially running concurrently.

EFF Deputy secretary-general, Leigh-Anne Mathys, also criticised what she described as the Speaker of the National Assembly’s nonchalance in pursuing punitive measures against O’Sullivan following the incident.

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    O’Sullivan’s walkout a ‘calculated act of defiance’, says Analyst Lindiwe Mpanza

Written by: Lindiwe Mpanza

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