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Pregnant accused drug mule Bella Culley toasted bread over a candle and had communal showers in her Georgia prison cell, her mum has claimed. The 19-year-old, who is reportedly due to give birth in December, will be formally sentenced next week after being charged with drug smuggling in Georgia earlier this year. Bella, a student nurse from Billingham, Teesside, disappeared in Thailand in May before later showing up in the country, which sits on the border of Europe and Asia. She was arrested after 11kg of cannabis and more than 400g of hashish were found in her luggage. Join our Court and Crime WhatsApp group HERE Bella's mum, Lyanne Kennedy, revealed the British teenager has now been moved to a prison "mother and baby" unit. She had previously spent five months in a jail cell at Georgia's Rustavi Prison Number Five. The mother told of the harsh conditions Bella endured in her former cell, including having a hole in the ground for a toilet, shared showers twice weekly and just one hour of fresh air each day, reports the Mirror . Lyanne also told the BBC that the new facility has better conditions. She said: "She now gets two hours out for walking, she can use the communal kitchen, has a shower in her room and a proper toilet. "They all cook for each other. Bella has been making eggy bread and cheese toasties, and salt and pepper chicken." Bella's situation has brought attention to the severe laws and penalties Georgia imposes around drugs and drug trafficking. The Brit has accepted a plea deal with Georgian prosecutors and has been told she will receive a two-year prison sentence. A Tbilisi court heard on Tuesday how the parents of the teenager - her mother, a charity worker, and father Niel Culley, 49, an oil rig technician - managed to pay a hefty fine of 500,000 Georgian Lari (£138,000) to the court. The young woman had previously been warned that she could face up to 20 years in prison. Bella's lawyer said the size of the fine paid would determine the length of her prison sentence, but for a "substantial sum" she could walk away. The huge sum of money raised will not be enough for Bella to walk free, but it has significantly reduced her potential sentence. Bella claimed she was forced to traffic drugs by thugs who branded her with an iron and showed her a video of a man being decapitated, saying the same would happen to her if she did not comply. In a previous hearing in July, she claimed: "I didn't want to do this. I was forced by torture... All I wanted to do was to travel." The teen's lawyer, Malkhaz Salakaia, said Bella pleaded guilty to smuggling drugs into Georgia, after flying from Thailand via the United Arab Emirates.