'Please just one Corby': Parole officer glad to see the back of Schapelle

Authorities in Indonesia are in no hurry to meet a new Schapelle Corby as the convicted drug smuggler nervously prepares to be deported back home to Australia.

Corby’s parole officer and counsellor Ni Ketut Sukiati is looking forward to seeing the back of her and the intense pressure that comes with her, The Courier Mail reports.

The parole officer said she hoped it would all be over soon, while a stressed and angry Corby had proven a professional challenge in recent times.

“Please no more foreigners like this,” Ms Ketut said.

“It makes us so busy... We’re tired. Please just one Corby.”

Schapelle Corby is due to be deported back to Australia this week. Photo: AAP
Schapelle Corby is due to be deported back to Australia this week. Photo: AAP

Corby's 2004 arrest spawned a myriad of twists that have kept her story alive in Australia for more than a decade.

Now the anxious former beauty student is set to step into an uncertain future - leaving behind her life of 13 years as an Indonesian prisoner.

In the back streets of Kuta, Corby has been sitting inside her house, nervously awaiting her deportation to Australia on May 27.

Security cameras have been installed and sarongs assembled around the home's gates in a bid to block photographers and cameramen.

The man reported to be her boyfriend, former drug prisoner Ben Panangian, as well as brother Michael and sister Mercedes, have been some of the few people spotted going in and out of the home.



Mercedes, who returned to Bali last week to "bring her home", visited the island's law and human rights office on her sister's behalf on Thursday, complaining of how her 39-year-old sister had been "stalked" by the media.

During a visit to the home that night, Corby emerged to greet correction officials with a sarong over her face.

She would sometimes open and close the covering to speak, Head of Bali Provincial Correction Division, Surung Pasaribu said.

"She's afraid... she's stressed," he told reporters, later adding: "It is normal that people who were about to be freed are feeling unease. It's our job to make her calm."

Corby - who by her own account is "petrified" of flying - is due to report to parole officers on May 27 for the last time since her release from Kerobokan in February 2014.

Police escort Corby through a throng during her trial. Photo: AAP
Police escort Corby through a throng during her trial. Photo: AAP

Immigration officers will then take her to the airport.

While flight details are unknown, Indonesian authorities want her out as quickly as possible - straight home to Australia, if not Brisbane.

Life as a "free woman" will still have its limitations.

It is too soon to say whether she will be allowed to return to Indonesia.

Standard procedure states she will be banned from returning for six months.

A distraught Corby reacts to learning her fate in her drug smuggling trial. Photo: Getty Images
A distraught Corby reacts to learning her fate in her drug smuggling trial. Photo: Getty Images

But due to the seriousness of her crime, Immigration Directorate spokesman Agung Sampurno said the six-month ban could be extended again and again upon request.

If she is allowed to return, Mr Sampurno said she should expect to be watched closely.

"If you ask should we be suspicious over her - that's natural, isn't it? ...that we supervise her, that we follow her."

Her first steps will also be monitored closely by media - which she has described as an ominous and "exploitative" force.

Corby speaks to her lawyer during her trial. Photo: AAP
Corby speaks to her lawyer during her trial. Photo: AAP

"It has been a part of our lives for 13 years, it has been of enormous interest," celebrity agent Max Markson said.

"People want to know what she is doing with her life."

It's a question Corby herself may not have an answer to.

While incarcerated in Kerobokan, Corby wrote 2006: "Where have I gone, where am I going? I can feel I'm gradually losing the essence that makes me me."