A confidential Spanish military report on the death of a Spanish UN peacekeeper during an exchange between the IDF and Hezbollah in Lebanon said he was manning a post that appeared to have been targeted, a newspaper reported Sunday.
El Pais cited extracts from the report which drew on testimony from soldiers following the January 28 incident when the Israeli military shelled border areas following a Hezbollah attack that left two Israeli soldiers dead.
Corporal Ivan Lopez Sanchez, who was stationed nearby, told investigators that the UN position was clearly targeted.
“Every time, they corrected the trajectory from Majidiye to the 4-28” post, where the UNIFIL peacekeepers were stationed, he said.
Spain and Israel have agreed to carry out a joint probe into the death of 36-year-old corporal Javier Soria Toledo.
Another Spanish soldier, Sergeant Julio Xavier Garcia, echoed Sanchez, saying the shells initially fell about 500 metres (yards) north of the UN post and then they “corrected the trajectory towards the position.”
A third soldier said fragmentation bombs were used in the attack and that the shelling finally appeared to target the main watch tower.
El Pais quoted a UN report which said that Israel had warned the UN peacekeepers at 11:40 am not to venture out, without giving any explanation.
Between 11:48 am and 1:43 pm, nearly 120 artillery shells, 90 mortar grenades and five projectiles were fired in the area, El Pais quoted the report as saying.
The 10,000-strong United Nations Interim Force Lebanon (UNIFIL) includes some 600 Spanish soldiers and troops from 35 other nations.
The clashes began when Hezbollah fired an anti-tank missile at a military convoy along the border area, killing two IDF soldiers – Major Yochai Kalangel and Sgt. Dor Nini – and prompting Israel to respond with air and ground strikes.
The 10,000-strong UNIFIL mission said at the time that it had observed six rockets fired towards Israel from southern Lebanon and that Israeli forces “returned artillery fire in the same general area.”
Senior peacekeeping official Edmond Mulet told council members that the attacks were a “serious violation” of ceasefire agreements and that UNIFIL had launched an investigation, according to a diplomat present at the council meeting.