Occupied Jerusalem: Israeli security sources acknowledged on Tuesday that the death of a Spanish UN peacekeeper in Lebanon fighting in January was caused by regime fire.

“The Spanish soldier was indeed killed by Israeli artillery, following a Hezbollah attack on army forces that killed two soldiers,” a source said on condition of anonymity.

A military statement in response to a query described the shelling of the UN post near Lebanon’s border with Israel as “an unfortunate event”.

“There was never any intention of harming United Nations forces,” it said. “The army is operating in order to prevent similar incidents in the future.”

The statement said that a “thorough” military investigation had been carried out and the results passed on to the Spanish army.

Spain and the Israelis had agreed on a joint probe into the January 28 death of 36-year-old Corporal Javier Soria Toledo.

The 10,000-strong United Nations Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) includes some 600 Spanish soldiers and troops from 35 other nations.

Israel occupied parts of Lebanon for 22 years until 2000 and the two countries are still technically at war.

The regime fought a bloody war with Lebanon’s Shiite militia Hezbollah in 2006 that killed more than 1,200 people in Lebanon, mostly civilians, and some 160 Israelis, most of them soldiers.

Spain’s El País newspaper on Sunday published what it said were extracts from the confidential Spanish military report, citing soldiers who said they appeared to have been deliberately targeted.

The paper, however, also quoted a UN report which said that a few minutes before the shelling began Israel had warned the UN peacekeepers not to venture outside their post, without giving an explanation.

Over the following two hours nearly 120 artillery shells, 90 mortar grenades and five projectiles were fired in the area, El País quoted the report as saying.