Pubdate: Wed, 14 Aug 2013 Source: Mercury, The (Australia) Copyright: 2013 Davies Brothers Ltd Contact: http://www.themercury.com.au/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/193 Author: Malcolm Holland CORBY PAROLE HOPES ON RISE SCHAPELLE Corby's hopes of being granted parole after almost a decade in a Balinese prison have taken a leap forward. Indonesian officials yesterday visited her cell and inspected the home of sister Mercedes where she will have to live if released. If Corby becomes the first foreign prisoner in Indonesia granted parole she must live with Mercedes and Balinese husband Wayan Widyartha in the traditional compound home they share with their three children and his extended family in Kuta. Sources said three female parole board officials yesterday morning first talked to the 36-year-old in her cell at Kerobokan Prison. They asked about her hopes for parole, her health and whether she could work while on parole and living with her sister. One of the three women who visited will become Corby's parole officer if she is granted parole. The trio then went to the compound in Kuta to decide if it was a suitable place for Corby to serve her parole. "It's good news and a step closer to freedom for my sister," Mercedes Corby said last night. It is also understood one of the most senior members of the community in the area around the compound also gave support for the move. An important part of Corby's parole bid is the promise Mercedes and Wayan will help her financially, with her "morale" and to "oversee her education as a responsible citizen". Corby last year became eligible for parole from her 20-year jail term after receiving several reductions for good behaviour which reduced her term to 15 years. The governor of Kerobokan jail, Gusti Ngurah Wiratna, last week said she had been recommended for another six-month sentence cut, set to be announced as part of Indonesian Independence Day celebrations on August 17. Corby was sentenced to 20 years jail for smuggling 4.2kg of marijuana into Indonesia in 2004. She still denies she knew the marijuana was in her body board bag and says she was an unwitting mule. Sources said she had not formally entered her request for parole. It is understood it could be weeks or months before the board makes a decision. Sources denied social media claims last night she would be released on October 30. - --- MAP posted-by: Jay Bergstrom