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UN to send investigators to Lebanon over potential law breaches, rights chief says

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GENEVA, June 10 (Reuters) - ‌The UN human rights office will deploy ​a team of investigators to Lebanon next week to assess potential ⁠violations of international law by all parties during the current war in the country, UN human rights chief Volker ​Türk said on Wednesday.

Lebanon was drawn into the wider Middle East ‌conflict on March 2 when the Tehran-backed Hezbollah militia fired rockets at Israel in solidarity with Iran, which was under ⁠U.S.-Israeli attack, prompting a major Israeli air ⁠and ground campaign.

"It's the first time that we are sending this assessment mission, and the idea is indeed to look at violations by all parties -- violations of international law, ‌violations of international human rights law, and to document ⁠this, and eventually to report back ‌to you on our findings," Turk ​said.

More than 3,600 people have been killed in Israeli strikes on Lebanon and more than one million Lebanese are ‌displaced. The U.S. declared a ceasefire ​on April 16 but ⁠fighting has continued, and Lebanon says Israel has ‌carried out nearly 3,500 strikes ⁠since the truce was announced.

The crisis is rapidly eroding food security, with nearly one in four people in Lebanon -- about ​1.24 million people -- ‌expected to face crisis and emergency levels of food insecurity ⁠until August, according to the ​U.N.

(Reporting by Olivia Le Poidevin, editing by Linda Pasquini, ​Editing by William Maclean)

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