Indonesian judges have jailed a man who robbed a gold shop to help fund the nightclub bombings on Bali last year and another who hid the suspected mastermind of the bombings.
Judges in the trial of Andri Oktavia ruled the Muslim militant was involved in an August 2002 robbery co-ordinated by convicted Bali blast organiser Imam Samudra, and sentenced Oktavia to 16 years in jail. Samudra is now on death row.
Oktavia is the fourth suspect in the robbery to receive penalties of between 15 and 16 years' imprisonment.
In a separate trial, the Denpasar district court found Makmuri guilty of helping the Bali bombers.
Judges sentenced Makmuri to seven years in jail for hiding Mukhlas, accused of being a senior member of the Jemaah Islamiah network and having overall responsibility for the Bali bombings that killed 202 people, mostly foreigners.
Several others charged with helping Mukhlas hide are on trial. Prosecutors have demanded the death penalty in the trial of Mukhlas.
After the October 12th, 2002, bombings on the resort island of Bali, Mukhlas hid in a small central Java town before police arrested him and his collaborators last December.
Indonesia has blamed the bombings on Jemaah Islamiah, a Southeast Asian Muslim network linked to a-Qaeda. More than 30 men have been named as suspects in the attack. Seven Muslim militants have been sentenced over the Bali blasts so far.