Lawyers for Myuran Sukumaran and Andrew Chan have been summonsed to appear in court next week, however authorities plan to take the men from their cells to their execution site within days.
Lawyer Todung Mulya Lubis has been summonsed to appear before the administrative court next Tuesday, where he is challenging the presidential decree that denied the pair clemency.
But it may come days too late for the Australians, with authorities planning their transfer to "Indonesia's Alcatraz" this week.
Mr Lubis said neither he nor the families had been notified of the plans to transfer the men this week.
"We hope it's not going to take place," he said.
"Please Attorney-General Prasetyo, don't move them to Nusakambangan."
Momock Bambang Samiarso, head of Bali's Provincial Prosecutors Office on Monday finalised his plans to move the Bali Nine pair from Kerobokan jail "this week, as soon as possible".
Ten officers will escort the Australians for their flight from Bali to Cilacap, the departure point for the central Java prison island of Nusakambangan.
He said their families would be notified "for sure, very soon".
They continued to make their final visits to Kerobokan jail on Monday, with Sukumaran's mother Raji and Chan's brother Michael staying the longest.
Ill health forced Chan's parents to say their goodbyes on Sunday and return to Sydney.
Tony Spontana, spokesman for Indonesia's attorney-general, says once they and other prisoners are on Nusakambangan island, they will announce what he called "D-Day" - the date of their executions.
"We're already in the stage of preparing the executions and these must be implemented," he told reporters in Jakarta.
Prime Minister Tony Abbott says Indonesia should not rush to execute when legal action is before the courts.
"The Indonesian government doesn't normally go ahead with executions of this type while there are legal options still available," Mr Abbott told reporters.
"And that's what we're saying to the Indonesian government: given that there are legal options that apparently are still there, let's not do this dreadful, final, irrevocable thing any time soon."
In Jakarta on Monday, representatives from the Australian embassy attended a briefing on procedural matters concerning the executions.
They left afterwards without speaking to reporters.
Representatives from France, Brazil, Nigeria and the Philippines - who have citizens facing execution at the same time as Sukumaran and Chan - were also present.
Brazil recalled its ambassador last month when a Brazilian was among the first six prisoners to be executed under President Joko Widodo.
The ambassador has returned to Jakarta and this time there are concerns for another Brazilian set for execution, drug smuggler Rodrigo Gularte, who is said to have a mental illness.
When Mr Joko made his first state visit to the Philippines last week, concerns were reportedly raised about their citizen, drug mule Mary Jane Fiesta Veloso, but no details were released.
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