Schauvliege refused to call her claim a “lie,” however, saying she had simply said something that wasn’t true.

Student organizers had already responded to the minister’s comments with a mix of disgust and dismissal.

“At first, I had to laugh really hard” after hearing the comments, march organizer Anuna de Wever told VRT network. The 17-year-old has helped gather as many as 30,000 students to attend recent Thursday climate strike marches and 80,000 demonstrators at a rally on January 27.

“It is very strange that a minister can lie about such a thing,” de Wever told the Guardian. “That’s just not the case. Can we stop doubting the movement?”

“I still hope that she wants to work with us on a more ambitious climate policy,” she added before Schauvliege announced her resignation.

“The minister’s allegation is an insult to the authentic engagement of so many young people,” said Youth for Climate, the grassroots group which has organized the marches, said in a statement.

The outgoing environment minister has clashed with climate action groups in the past. Greenpeace filed suit against the Flanders government last year over its failure to take meaningful action to curb air pollution from cars.

“These governments are willfully negligent by not sufficiently protecting their citizens against the serious impact that polluted air has on our health,” Greenpeace Belgium said in a complaint about Schauvliege’s administration.

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