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Preliminary UN Probe Blames Israel and Likely Hezbollah for Peacekeeper Deaths

April 7 (Reuters) – Preliminary findings in a ⁠U.N. ⁠probe into the deaths ⁠of three Indonesian peacekeepers in Lebanon last month show ​one was killed by an Israeli tank projectile and two others by ‌an improvised explosive device most ‌likely placed by Hezbollah, the U.N. said on Tuesday.

“These are ⁠preliminary ⁠findings, based on initial physical evidence,”  U.N. spokesperson Stephane Dujarric ​told a news briefing, adding that a full investigation process was continuing that included engagement with the parties concerned.

Dujarric called the incidents “unacceptable” and said ​they could amount to war crimes under international law. He said ⁠the ⁠United Nations had requested ⁠that ​the cases be investigated and prosecuted by national authorities to bring the ​perpetrators to justice.

The ⁠Indonesian peacekeepers were killed in two separate incidents in southern Lebanon on March 29 and 30 after a bloody weekend in which Lebanese journalists and medics were also killed in Israeli strikes.

Bombardment in ⁠southern Lebanon on Tuesday forced a convoy of humanitarian aid organized ⁠by the Vatican’s embassy for a besieged Christian town to turn back, a priest in the town told Reuters.

Also on Tuesday, a spokesperson for the peacekeeping force, the United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon, said the Israeli military had blocked a UNIFIL logistics convoy and briefly detained one of its peacekeepers. The spokesperson, Kandice Ardiel, said that any detention ⁠of a United Nations peacekeeper was a blatant violation of international law and that the Israeli military had informed UNIFIL it had launched an investigation into the issue.

(Reporting by David ​Brunnstrom in Washington; Additional reporting by Menna Alaa El ​Din; Editing by Matthew Lewis)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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