Bali Nine ringleaders Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran have been killed by an Indonesian firing squad, local media is reporting.
The Jakarta Post reported Chan, 31, Sukumaran, 33, and six other prisoners were taken to a jungle clearing on the island Nusakambangan.
They were shot dead by firing squads comprising 12 police privates shortly after midnight (6pm BST).
Officials ignored agonised pleas for clemency from the prisoners' families and Australian and international officials and an outstanding constitutional court hearing.
There are reports Mary Jane Fiesta Veloso, the Filipino drug mule, was spared after new information emerged about her case.
The armed police who shot dead Australian drug smugglers Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaranan headed to Nusakambangan Island earlier today
Myuran Sukumaran's grief-stricken mother, Raji, made a desperate appeal for her son's life as her husband Sam looks on - but it was to no avail
Raji and Sam Sukumaran try to come to terms with their grief on the worst day of their lives
The Australian duo were accompanied by their nominated spiritual advisers in some of their final moments, although it is understood they did not witness the executions.
Sukumaran had pledged to face the firing squad with 'strength and dignity' and was planning to go without a blindfold. Their last meal was KFC.
Daily Mail Australia has been told the grim task officially informing the families will fall to Australia's Consul-General, Majell Hind.
An Australian representative will accompany the bodies as they are taken by road to Jakarta later today.
Sukuraman's sister, Brintha, is supported as she is escorted through the crowd towards the port gates
Condemned Australians Andrew Chan and Myuran Sukumaran have been executed in Bali tonight, according to local reports
Distressed family and supporters battle through the crowds to reach the port gates
Sukuraman's mother Raji (centre) cries as she arrives at the port authority office at Cilacap for a last visit with her son
Family members and supporters make their way through the crowd as they prepared to visit the men for the last time
Reporters mobbed the families of the prisoners as they arrived
Brintha Sukumaran (centre), a sister of Myuran Sukumaran, screams as she arrives at Wijaya Pura port to visit her brother
A clearly distressed Brintha Sukumaran had to be carried when she arrived at the prison
Chan, 31, and Sukumaran, 33, were the first to die in the round of executions.
A British grandmother, Lindsay Sandiford, is expected to be executed within months.
The 58-year-old was sentenced to death two years ago after being caught with £1.6million of cocaine in her suitcase.
Mrs Sandiford, from Cheltenham, reportedly told a friend she was heartbroken at the news about Chan, who she is understood to have befriended in jail.
'If they kill someone as good as Andrew, what hope is there for me?' she said.
'I just want to get it over with. I feel like just giving up.'
She says she was coerced into smuggling vast quantities of cocaine from Bangkok to Bali by a crime syndicate.
Michael Chan (centre, in green) brother of Andrew Chan, makes his way through the media to the port authority office before travelling to Nusakambangan Island
Michael Chan said his brother and Sukumaran have been denied their choice of minister in their final hours
Coffins were seen being brought into the prison ahead of the pair's execution, which has now taken place
The development came just hours after Sukumaran's mother, Raji, made a desperate appeal for her son's life to be spared.
Wracked with grief and despair, Raji could not disguise the pain she was enduring in the final moments before her son's death. But still she begged for mercy.
'I won't see my son again and they are going to take him tonight and shoot him and he is healthy and he is beautiful and he has a lot of compassion for other people,' she pleaded.
'I am asking the government not to kill him, please president, please don't kill him today. Please don't. Call off the execution.
'Please don't kill my son. Please don't.'
Despite her desperate pleas, her son was not spared by the Indonesian authorities.
Asked about a joint statement by the EU, France and Australia urging Indonesia to cease its executions, Attorney General HM Prasetyo cited Indonesia's legal sovereignty: 'That's what our laws decided. We say, our courts are open, fair and nothing is closed.
'We have explained that we're not against them [personally]. What we fight is the serious crime of drugs.
'We ask for prayers and support from everyone so that this unpleasant duty can be finished well, without any disturbances.'
President Joko Widodo had told the attorney general to 'proceed according to the rules'.
Sukumaran's brother Chinthu spent a few hours with his brother before bidding goodbye. He said they talked about the death penalty and how the deaths would change nothing.
'He (the Indonesian president) knows this is just a waste. He knows this is not going to solve anything with drugs (smuggling),' said Chinthu.
'Drug trafficking will still be there. If these nine people die today, tomorrow, next week, next month, it is still not going to stop anything. I ask the president to please show mercy.
'Please don't let my Mum and my sister have to bury my brother.'
Source: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/
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