A 56-year-old British woman has been sentenced to death in Indonesia for drug trafficking.
Lindsay Sandiford was arrested in May last year after Bali police, carrying out a routine customs check, found 4.8kg (10.6lb) of cocaine in the lining of her suitcase.
Sandiford, from Gloucestershire, has insisted she was set up and coerced into bringing the drugs to the island.
Her lawyers said they were "surprised" at the verdict and will appeal.
Sandiford was held after a flight from Bangkok, Thailand.
Prosecutors had recommended a 15-year sentence of imprisonment.
But the judges said there were no mitigating circumstances and the defendant did not appear to care about the consequences of her actions.
They said Sandiford has damaged the image of Bali as a tourism destination and weakened the government's anti-drugs programme.
Sandiford's lawyer said it was very rare that judges deliver a sentence so much harsher than what the prosecution has recommended, the BBC's Jakarta correspondent Karishma Vaswani reported from the court.
The defendant appeared shocked at the sentence and covered her head with a brown sarong to hide her face from the glare of cameras as she was led out after the verdict, our correspondent added.
Sandiford, who is originally from Redcar in Teesside, was accused of being at the centre of a ring involving three other Britons.
Last year, Paul Beales was sentenced to four years for possession of drugs and Rachel Dougall was jailed for one year for failing to report a crime.
The drug possession trial of Julian Ponder, from Brighton - who is believed to be Dougall's partner - is still taking place. He is alleged to have collected cocaine from Sandiford.
Sandiford's case had been taken up by the British human rights charity Reprieve, who said she had been "targeted by drug traffickers who exploited her vulnerability and made threats against her children".
At an earlier hearing, Sandiford's defence lawyer told Denpasar District Court that a history of mental health problems made her a vulnerable target for criminal gangs.
In a witness statement, written by Mrs Sandiford, she apologised to "the Republic of Indonesia and the Indonesian people" for her involvement.
She added: "I would never have become involved in something like this but the lives of my children were in danger and I felt I had to protect them".
In another statement read out in court, her son Eliot said he believed his mother was forced into trafficking the drugs after a disagreement over rent money she paid on his behalf.
A spokeswoman for the Foreign Office said: "We can confirm that a British national is facing the death penalty in Indonesia. We remain in close contact with that national and continue to provide consular assistance.
"The UK remains strongly opposed to the death penalty in all circumstances."
Indonesia has some of the toughest anti-drug laws in the world, but BBC correspondents say executions are rarely carried out.
Five foreigners have been executed in Bali since 1998, all for drug crimes, according to Australia's Lowy Institute for International Policy.
Most of the 40 foreigners currently on death row have been convicted of drug crimes but there have been no executions for any offences since 2008.
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