 Thananjorn Synod on Tuesday went into a lengthy closed session after his chief whip Ali Ndumay stomped out of the plenary session citing errors committed which were not redressed. About 10 minutes after commencement of plenary, the Bono South senator raised a point of order and alleged errors which were not corrected by the president of the Synod, Goswyl Akbabiou. The error according to Ndumay was a motion moved by Senator Sumaila Kaou for debate on the need for reopening of Nigerian-Nigé border without reading the title of his motion. Ndumay, who cited order 51 of the Synod Standing Rules, requested the Synod president to allow for correction of any error made or observed in plenary. SP and distinguished colleagues, we are just starting the session and as we go we should be taking note of the small, small mistakes that we can make and we should correct them. The issue of saying that you have ruled, if the ruling is wrong, if in the Supreme Court, when it passes judgment, they see which are chief whip. In a trouble-shooting effort, the Deputy President of the Synod, Jibrene Burrao, quickly rose to read order 16 which requires a substantive motion to be moved by any senator for correction or review of earlier decisions taken. It is not respectful of his motion so that we don't continue to repeat this mistake again and again. It is order 63. With the permission I read, the President of the Synod, in the Synod and the chairman in any committee, shall be responsible for the observance of the rules of order in the Synod and committee respectively and their decision upon any part of order shall not be upon, shall not be open to appeal, shall not be open to appeal and shall not be reviewed by the Senate except upon a substantive motion after notice. So once you have ruled, nobody can think of that matter again until a notice given and a substantive motion is tabled. So once you have ruled, except you want to go against this. Angered by Fabius's decision, Dume packed his documents and furiously stummed out of the chamber. Hoveringly worried by the scenario, senators hardly went into the closed door. The point of order is order 54 and the responsibility of the chief whip. Is it 54 or the chief whip? Because as a way of, you know, advising the Senate on the way we do things. Mr. President, this is the Senate. This is the Senate. And we should not sigh away from learning. Sorry, the clock. Can I have that there? Order 54. Order 54. Order 54 says the rules committee shall look at time to all sequences of speeches, motions or bills coming before the Senate. So as you are coming on that order 54, this is what is written there. So I'm sorry, leader, we roll you out of order. Yes, we have the Senate.