Israeli Military Finds No Negligence in Killing of Farmer Near Lebanon Border

March 29 (Reuters) – The Israeli military ⁠said ⁠on Sunday it ⁠had found no negligence or ethical failures ​by officers involved in the killing of Israeli farmer Ofer ‌Moskovitz near the Lebanese ‌frontier earlier this month.

The head of Israel’s ⁠Northern Command ⁠said on March 23 that Israeli forces had ​misfired artillery, killing 60-year-old Moskovitz, an avocado farmer from the town of Misgav Am.

The military had initially attributed the ​incident to cross-border fire from Lebanon.

“The inquiry found that ⁠the ⁠fire was carried out ⁠during ​an operational incident providing close support to the maneuvering forces,” ​the Israeli ⁠military said in a statement.

“It also determined that the error resulted from a convergence of several operational factors and non-optimal firing conditions. Alongside this, no negligence ⁠was found, nor was any ethical failure identified among those ⁠involved in the firing process within the artillery unit.”

The military said the head of its ground forces had ordered the introduction of a stricter operational directive addressing artillery fire over civilian communities and infrastructure.

Israel has launched a major ground assault and air campaign in Lebanon against ⁠Hezbollah, the Iran‑backed group that began firing into Israel on March 2, two days after the start of U.S.-Israeli strikes on Iran.

(Reporting by Hatem ​Maher and Muhammad Al Gebaly; Editing by Susan ​Fenton and Ros Russell)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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