A young Queens woman plummeted 150 feet off a cliff in Thailand during a desperate attempt to flee a sexual predator — who continued to molest her even as she lay on the ground after her fall, reports said Tuesday.

Hannah Gavios, 23, is currently undergoing treatment for a severe spinal injury at Bangkok Hospital in Phuket after the frightening Sept. 1 incident.

A relative told The Post on Tuesday that she is partially paralyzed from the waist down, though it is still unclear whether her condition is permanent.

“I really thought I was going to die,” Gavios told the Daily Mail. “It was dark around 11 p.m. and the only way to get back to my accommodation was by crossing the cliffs.”

Her parents have flown in from Bayside to be with her while she recovers, the relative said.

A day after arriving in Thailand, Gavios got lost at Railay Beach in the resort of Krabi and sought help at a local tourist shop. A worker at the store offered to help her get back to her hotel, but instead led her up a pitch-black mountain in the jungle, where he attacked her.

Gavios, who has been teaching English in Vietnam, said she didn’t have a good feeling about the man but relented because she was tired.

“I’d been traveling for 16 hours, so I guess I wasn’t feeling myself,” she explained. “While we were walking, he grabbed me and was holding me down and trying to take off my clothes.”

The horrified woman said she punched the crazed attacker — and even went for his ear.

“I was biting his ear so hard it almost came off. His ear was half torn off,” she said. “He was in pain and asked me to stop, so we shook hands and he stopped but I was still nervous and he was still trying to harass me so there was no choice but to run.”

With her mind set on nothing but getting away, Gavios ran blindly through the thick jungle before accidentally tumbling off the side of the cliff in the darkness.

“It was pitch black and before I knew it, I was in mid air falling off a cliff. I was honestly thinking I wouldn’t survive,” she said. “I hit my head a few times and landed with a big bump. I was screaming in pain. It was the most painful thing ever. I felt like a total vegetable. I felt completely vulnerable. I couldn’t move anything.”

To make matters worse, the pursuing monster – identified as 28-year-old Apai Ruengvorn – caught up with her as she lay helpless.

“He heard me screaming and moaning and he came down and climbed down the mountain and starting crying and praying,” she said, adding that Ruengvorn was strangely remorseful about the attack.

“He was feeling very guilty. I was begging him to call for help. He got on the phone and started calling and I thought somebody was coming, but nobody came.”

Reungvorn let some time pass before he decided he wasn’t through with Gavios.

“He got on top of me. He took of his pants and masturbated on me,” she recalled. “He didn’t rape me but he did everything else. I really thought I was going to die.”

Gavios said she tried to remain calm and avoid screaming to prevent him from choking her.

“As soon as it got lighter I started calling for help. He kept saying, ‘No police! No police!’” she said.

Ruengvorn, who has since fessed up to the attack, initially scurried off when it was all over — but his guilty conscious was too much to bear and he later returned with others who took Gavios to the hospital, reports said.

“I’m taking one day at a time,” she said, explaining that she wanted “to stay in Asia and return to teaching in Vietnam” once she had recovered.

Ruengvorn has been charged with committing obscene behavior toward another person and causing serious injury, according to the Daily Mail.

Pictures snapped by local media show him being forced to re-enact the attack for cops, pointing to the spot where Gavios fell.

Friends and family said they weren’t shocked to hear how the former graphic design student had managed to survive the fall and fend off a possible rape attempt.

“Her personality is she’s always strong minded, she’s responsible and capable. I can see her getting away,” said Maria Torres, who works in the same Manhattan office building as Gavios’s father and has known her for ten years.

Kelsi Perez, an 18-year-old cousin from Putnam Valley, agreed.

“I’m actually not surprised,” she said. “I mean, it’s hard to believe what happened, but she’s honestly a very strong person. Very tough.”

Gavios, who attended the city’s Fashion Institute of Technology, describes herself on Facebook as an English teacher with Globe Education Link.

While in Asia, she is believed to have taught English to people in Chiang Mai, Thailand and Vietnam’s Lao Cai Province.

“She’s very brave to stay,” Torres said. “It just goes to show you what type of person she is. She went there to do something and she is sticking it out.”