Ireland will conduct an independent review into the deaths of three Irish soldiers whose vehicle was blown up on a United Nations mission in Lebanon.

The soldiers, part of a UNIFIL detachment, died in 1989 after their truck ran over a landmine believed to have been planted by Hezbollah and intended for Israeli vehicles.

The soldiers’ families are suing the Irish state for compensation. An Irish army inquiry found no negligence in the deaths.

Alan Shatter, Ireland’s defense minister and its only Jewish national politician, is sending 400 Irish troops to South Lebanon at the end of the month for the first time in 10 years.

Forty-seven Irish soldiers were killed during a 23-year deployment with UNIFIL, which ended in 2001 after Israel withdrew from southern Lebanon. — jta

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