Allah Noherdim Nuhinkan

Allah Noherdim Nuhinkan ( Nuhin pronunciation: [alːah nohɛrdim nuhiŋʃan]; lit. God Protect the Nuhins) is the national anthem of Nuhinba, adopted after the country's independence from the Borundian Federation in 1981. It was written in 1973 by Nuhin nationalist Gaydir Jahan, and the music is based on a Nuhin folklore song.

History
Jahan, a Nuhin nationalist, had written many anti-Borundian songs, including the anthem, which was written in 1973. According to him, Nuhinba will be reestablished as a kingdom again one day, so he mentioned the word, 'kingdom' in the anthem. It was banned by the Borundian government in 1978 for encouraging anti-Borundian sentiment and seperatism.

The song was eventually adopted in 1981 as the anthem of the newly formed Nuhinba without lyrics. In 1987, however, the anthem was readopted with lyrics, but had to be revised and the third stanza had to be omitted due to the anti-Borundian verse.

The Nuhin far-right political party, NPA, called for an appeal to bring back the third stanza in 2007, but was rejected and fully banned. Jahan, the writer of the anthem, however, refused to pull off the third stanza of the anthem, and was threatened imprisonment if he did not do so, but he died before he could pull of the stanza in 2009, so the government brought it back to honor his death, only to be banned to be played in Borundia in 2012. The third stanza once again had to be taken off in 2015.

Lyrics
The legal lyrics without the third stanza regulated by the government:

Third stanza
The controversial third stanza, often known as the forbidden stanza, has been banned by the Nuhin government for mentioning the Borundians as 'blood-suckers', and is only often sang by ultranationalists. In 2017, a public school in Khanjori was fined $250,000 (N₭ 1,000,000) for accidentally using the third stanza.