It seems some people are still having trouble accepting the fact that Saudi women won their right to drive. 

Just days before they are set to hit the kingdom's roads on June 24, news reports stating that thousands of females are failing driving tests went viral on Saudi Twitter. 

The news began circulating online after several news sites published statistics allegedly released by Al Sharq Driving School. 

The reported numbers revealed that only 67 women out of 13,000 who applied in Al Sharqiya area passed their driving tests. 

Shortly after the news made the rounds online, tweeps who contacted the driving school's management to investigate the matter, revealed the numbers weren't sent out by any of its officials. 

Nevertheless, Saudi women hit back, with responses that were just right on point. 

The inaccurate numbers were all over Twitter

But Saudi women were all there for it

"I doubt such an outcome." 

"This isn't true, I got a license and know many who got theirs"

"This is just a way to demotivate women!!" 

Many tried to make sense of the numbers

"What is meant here is that 67 out of 13,000 who applied, successfully completed their tests while the rest are still waiting to get them done. When your partner in society is the first who tries to put you down, you've got nothing to do but be patient." 

But just really couldn't

"What driving school can fit 13,000 students? This is a university not a driving school." 

"You liars"

Many savagely hit back at the news

"Did those immature people driving on our roads take these tests too?"

With responses that were just right on point

"If this is true, then great. Only those who passed can drive. Now it's your turn to revoke the licenses of male drivers and retrain them... because most of them got their licenses without training or passing tests." 

"We'll learn how to drive just as men did. We're just as intelligent as them, if not more"

A Saudi royal decree passed in September granted women their right to drive

Saudi Arabia's King Salman issued a royal decree granting women their right to drive in September last year. 

The order ended a long-standing policy that banned women from driving in the country for decades. 

The ban had been heavily criticized by international campaigners and women's groups.

In recent months, Saudi women have been getting ready to get behind the wheel, attending driving lessons and prepping up to officially own the kingdom's roads.