The court in Banda Aceh, on western Sumatra island, yesterday handed Chief Sergeant Joko Rianto a two-month jail term and Chief Private Rawali a three-month sentence.
Rianto was given a five million rupiah (USD 460) fine while Rawali, who like many Indonesians goes by one name, was ordered to pay 2.5 million rupiah.
"Rawali and Joko Rianto have been found legitimately and convincingly guilty of illegally possessing dead protected animals," judge Lieutenant Colonel Budi Purnomo said.
Tiger parts are frequently used in traditional medicine in Asia despite the lack of peer-reviewed scientific evidence showing that they have any medicinal benefits.
Rawali claimed a friend had given him the tiger to repay a debt.
Ratno Sugito, a local animal activist, welcomed the sentences, "Even though the sentence was weak, at least the military court showed its willingness to enforce the law."
The Sumatran tiger is critically endangered and there are only an estimated 400 to 500 still alive in the wild on the island from which the animal takes its name.
The court did not disclose the species of the bear although it said the animal was protected by law.
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