Husband Pays To Have Wife Killed—Kidnappers Spare Her, Then She Crashes Her Own Funeral

After 11 years of living as a refugee in Australia, a mother of eight returned to her hometown in east Africa to attend a family member's funeral.

In 2015, Noela Rukundo was relaxing in her hotel room when her husband, Balenga, called her. He casually suggested she step outside for some air.

But as Noela stood outside in the sun, a man suddenly approached her with a gun, forced her into a car, and drove them to a remote building.

Before she knew it, Noela was tied up and being held captive by a group of kidnappers.

"What did you do to this man?" the kidnappers asked her. "Why has this man asked us to kill you?'"

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Noela, terrified beyond belief, had no clue what they were talking about.

Frustrated for answers, the kidnappers proceeded to call the man who hired them to murder Noela and put him on speakerphone. The wife and mother quickly realized the man's voice on the other end of the line was coming from her own husband.

Scroll down to see how this truly unbelievable story unfurled…

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Washington Post

In 2004, Noela Rukundo, a mother of eight, arrived in Australia as an African refugee.

So did a man named Balenga Kalala, whom she eventually married.

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Washington State University

In January 2015, Noela returned to Burundi in east Africa to attend her stepmother's funeral.

While relaxing in her hotel room, Noela received a phone call from her husband Kalala who suggested she step outside for some fresh air.

She did… but then she noticed a strange man walking straight towards her.

The man suddenly pulled out a gun and told Noela not to scream. He forced her into a car and drove to a remote building.

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Pixabay

Noela was tied to a chair. She heard her kidnappers saying they needed to call "the boss."

"What did you do to this man?" the kidnappers asked her. "Why has this man asked us to kill you?'"

But Noela had absolutely no clue what or who they were talking about.

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BBC

"Your husband!" the kidnappers shouted in frustration.

Noela called them liars. There was no way Kalala set this up!

"Let me call who has paid us to kill you," they said.

And with that, Noela heard her husband's voice on the loudspeaker saying, "Kill her."

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ABC News

Noela was held captive for two days until the kidnappers ultimately let her go without telling Kalala.

"We don't kill women and children," they told her.

Instead of following through with the plan, the men hired to kill Neola extorted more money from Kalala and lied to him, telling him she was dead.

The men also had a surprising instruction for Noela: tell other women to leave their violent husbands.

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Pixabay

Noela quietly returned to Australia, where her funeral was being held.

As she watched mourners leaving her own service, she confronted Kalala on the spot.

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Conservative Tribune

Her husband was absolutely shocked. "Is it my eyes? Is it a ghost?!" he exclaimed.

Kalala touched her shoulder to make sure he wasn't seeing things and jumped back in dismay. He even apologized.

But Noela felt a sudden sense of power — "like somebody who had risen again."

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Facebook

Noela called the police and told them everything.

At first, Kalala denied the murder plot. But as it turned out, the kidnappers provided authorities with recordings of Kalala organizing the hit and money-transfer receipts as proof of the contract killing. When police played him the evidence, he broke down.

Still, Kalala had no real explanation for the evil plot against his wife.

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Twitter / Laura Hoch

The unbelievable story went viral.

Commenters couldn't help but note Noela's experience would make the perfect movie plot for a heart-pounding thriller.

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Washington Post

Kalala plead guilty to incitement to murder and was sentenced to nine years in prison.

As for Noela, revenge was certainly sweet.

"I will stand up like a strong woman," she told The Washington Post.

"My situation, my past life? That is gone. I’m starting a new life now."

This is one of the most unbelievable stories of revenge we've ever seen. If you agree, please SHARE Noela Rukundo's story with your friends on Facebook!