The condemned Bali Nine members Myuran Sukumaran and Andrew Chan could be executed as early as next month after the Indonesian Attorney-General said there could not be a second judicial review of their case.
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H.M. Prasetyo said the two Australians would be executed not in Bali but in a different location that was still to be determined.
Asked if Chan and Sukumaran would be executed next month, Mr Prasetyo said it had not yet been decided.
"It's not an easy thing," he said.
Chan and Sukumaran are among 11 prisoners on death row in Indonesia who will face the firing squad because their clemency pleas have been rejected by the President.
Eight have been condemned for narcotics offences and three for premeditated murder.
Mr Prasetyo said it was still being discussed whether the Bali Nine would be included in the second batch of executions. However, earlier this month he said drug felons would be the focus of the second round of executions.
Lawyers for Chan and Sukumaran on Wednesday said they would lodge a second judicial review into the men's cases as serious mistakes had been made by the judges in the first case review.
However Mr Prasetyo said there could only be one judicial review and that legal avenue had already been exhausted by the Bali Nine in 2010.
"There can only be one PK [judicial review], not two or three," he said.
More to come