The Saudi teen who fled to Bangkok to evade her family and tweeted out pleas for help safely arrived in Canada on Saturday.

Rahaf Mohammed al-Qunun gained refuge there after a harrowing week in which she used social media to fight off attempts to return her to Saudi Arabia, where she said she’d be killed for renouncing Islam.

“This is Rahaf al-Qunun, a very brave new Canadian,” Foreign Minister Chrystia Freeland said as she arrived arm-in-arm with the 18-year-old at Toronto Pearson International Airport.

The saga began Jan. 5, when al-Qunan fled from her family vacation in Kuwait to Thailand. When Thai authorities stopped her and seized her passport, she holed up in a transit lounge hotel room and began tweeting pleas for help that eventually went viral.

“I’m now in real danger because the Saudi embassy is trying to force me to return,” she wrote in her first tweet, which reached just 24 followers. “I’m afraid,” she stated in her next tweet. “My family will kill me.”

The missives caught the attention of Egyptian-American activist Mona Eltahawy, who translated the original Arabic for her massive Twitter following. Phil Robertson, the Bangkok-based Asia deputy director for Human Rights Watch, soon learned about al-Qunan. He was able to guide her through her ordeal while the UN high commissioner for refugees got involved.

Meanwhile, Thailand on Monday tried to deport al-Qunan back to Kuwait, but she barricaded herself in the hotel room with an Australian journalist and continued to tweet.

“It would have been better if they confiscated her cellphone instead of her passport, because Twitter changed everything,” sai the Saudi Arabian charge d’affaires in Bangkok.

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s nation offered to take her in on Friday.

Al-Qunan had a broad smile on her face as she exited the plane in Toronto. She didn’t answer questions but tweeted her thanks to the international coterie that helped her.

“I would like to thank you people for supporting me and saving my life,” she wrote.

Few such tales conclude with a happy ending.

Two Saudi sisters jumped into the Hudson River and to their deaths in October after requesting US asylum.

The bodies of Rotana Farea, 22, and her sister, Tala, 16, were found bound together with duct tape along the banks of the river. They’d spent nearly a year trying to gain freedom from an allegedly abusive family in Fairfax, Va. They apparently came to New York after eight months in a shelter.

With Wire Services