The remaining Bali Nine members have returned to their home states and reunited with their families.
For the first time in nearly 20 years, the remaining five members reunited with family in Brisbane, Sydney and Melbourne on Friday morning.
Michael Czugaji landed in Brisbane; Martin Stephens landed in Sydney; and Matthew Norman and Si Yi Chen, who are from New South Wales, landed in Melbourne and were greeted by friends who supported the pair while they were in Bali’s Kerobokan jail.
It is unknown if the fifth member, Scott Rush, was on the same flight to return to Brisbane.
They spent several days in Howard Springs quarantine facility before flying back to their homes on Thursday night.
The freedom of the five came last Sunday when they were flown from Indonesia to Darwin after a deal was broken between the two countries to allow their return on humanitarian grounds.
Earlier pleas for pardons had fallen through until last month’s “top secret” deal was wagered between Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and new Indonesia President Prabowo Subianto.
Mr Albanese confirmed there was no “payback arrangement” with the Indonesian government.
The Bali Nine
In 2005, eight men and one woman were arrested for attempting to smuggle nearly nine kilograms of heroine into Australia.
The two ring leaders, Andrew Chan and Myruan Sukumara were executed by firing squad in 2015 while Tan Duc Than Nguyen died of stomach cancer in 2018.
Renae Lawrence had her life sentence shortened to 20 years in jail and was released in 2018.