A British drug mule grandmother in the death cell of Indonesia is so convinced that she will be freed from the prison that she has begun to give her clothes away to other prisoners.
Lindsay Sandiford, 67, has been locked up since 2013 in a tight cell in the hellish Kerobokan prison of Bali, where she is confronted with execution by shooting team.
The grandmother of two was sentenced to death because he tried to smuggle £ 1.6 million cocaine in the capital of Indonesia by filling it in the lining of her suitcase.
But her friends say that she has now 'dropped into depression', because she thought she would have been released in the meantime because of a change in the law of the country.
The new legislation means that Sandiford could have her death penalty converted into a prison sentence, because she has served for more than ten years behind bars where she has shown good behavior.
A source told the mirror: 'She has given away all her clothes and things she had because she was expecting to be released. But it is clear that she will be released in a few months, together with other Westerners.
“The new Indonesian president has said among his many changes that he wants RO to lower the figures in prison.
'Local people are released, then overseas people must be viewed. The Australian drug group known as the Bali Nine is already back in Australia. '

Lindsay Sandiford, 67, has been locked up since 2013 in a tight cell in the hellish Kerobokan prison of Bali, where she is confronted with execution by shooting team

The grandmother of two was sentenced to death for trying £ 1.6 million in cocaine in the capital of Indonesia by filling it in the lining of her suitcase
The Brit, from Yorkshire, who has no previous convictions, claimed that she was forced by a drug syndicate in the VK to smuggle cocaine from Thailand to Bali through threats for the life of one of her two sons in Great Britain.
She received a death sentence, even though she collaborated with the police in an angel to arrest people higher in the syndicate, which caused a protest from human rights lawyers and former British director of public persecutions Ken Macdonald who said she had been treated with 'fairly extraordinary seriousness'.
The alleged leader Julian Ponder, 50 of the syndicate, 50, from Brighton, was freed from the Kerobokan at the end of 2017 -after rumors after rumors that more than £ 1 million in bribes was paid to drop human trafficking against Ponder, his former partner Rachel Dougall and colleague Brit Paul Beales.
Dougall served a year and Beales for involvement in the conspiracy for four years.
Now that gray hair and suffering arthritis, Sandiford spends days at a time in the tight cell prison of five meters per five meters that she shares with four other female prisoners, most of them condemned poorly trained local women for drug delicacies.

Displayed: Sandiford as a young woman. Her friends say that she has now 'dropped into depression' because she thought she would have been released in the meantime because of a change in the law of the country

The new legislation means that Sandiford could have her death penalty converted into a prison sentence, because she has served for more than ten years behind bars where she has shown good behavior
The prison houses 1,300 prisoners – four times the number of people for whom the prison was built in 1979 – and was previously described by prisoners as a 'hellhole' with frequent 'murders, rapes, overdoses and bashings'.
An Indonesian woman prisoned before corruption said last March that Sandiford was seen as 'queen' of prison.
Examples of the special treatment of the drug-made muelee that are said to be able to order a medium-rare steak once a week.
But she added that the grandmother had led Breis lessons for her colleague prisoners.