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(Image: REUTERS/SNAPCHAT)

Rahaf Mohammed caused a global sensation when she barricaded herself in an airport hotel room in Bangkok and begged not be deported back to Saudi Arabia.

She has renounced Islam and her last name al-Qunun after claiming her family abused her and had made threats to kill her, which they denied.

After being resettled in Canada by the UN refugee agency, she has been enjoying previously forbidden pleasures such as bacon.

The social media-savvy teen has now shared snaps of red wine and a lit cigarette as she continues to enjoy her new home — despite the chilly temperature.

(Image: SNAPCHAT) (Image: AFP)

She captioned the image of the roll-up in Arabic - translating to “evaporate and evaporate”.

She also shared a picture of the glass of red wine she indulged in on the flight to Toronto over the weekend.

On Tuesday, Rahaf shared a picture on Snapchat of Canadian-style bacon and eggs with the caption “Omg bacon”, heart emojis, and the Canadian flag.

The teen also revealed her bare legs in a knee-length dress, which was forbidden in her ultra-conservative home country.

Meanwhile, the refugee agency helping her revealed it has hired a security guard 24/7 due to threats to her safety.

(Image: SNAPCHAT)

Mario Calla, the executive director of Costi Immigrant Services, which has been contracted by the Canadian government to help Ms Mohammed, said the embattled teenager received multiple threats online on Tuesday.

“She sees these threats. She has left Islam and she basically has broken away from her family, and that scares her,” he added.

In a press conference on Tuesday, Rahaf thanked the Canadian and Thai governments as well as the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees in a statement read on her behalf by a settlement worker.

“I am one of the lucky ones,” she said.

“I know there are unlucky women who disappeared after trying to escape or who could not do anything to change their reality.”

(Image: REUTERS)

She added her mission now was to learn english and help other women fleeing violence.

“Today and for years to come, I will work in support of freedom for women around the world,” she said.

“The same freedom I experienced on the first day I arrived in Canada.”

Rahaf also said she wants to make her own decisions on education, on a career and who she will marry, whereas before she would have needed permission from a male guardian.

“I had no say in any of this. Today I can proudly say that I am capable of making all those decisions,” she said.