European Left Alliance urges EU ministers to suspend Israel agreement

Rights groups also urge EU to act against Israel over Gaza, Lebanon abuses before ministers meet

Pro-Palestine demonstrators gather outside Downing Street to protest a proposed Israeli law that would allow the death penalty for Palestinian prisoners, in London, United Kingdom on March 31, 2026.

The European Left Alliance on Monday called on EU foreign ministers to immediately suspend the EU-Israel Association Agreement, saying a citizens’ initiative demanding action on Palestine had collected more than 1 million signatures.

In a joint statement issued ahead of the Foreign Affairs Council meeting in Luxembourg on Tuesday, the alliance said the European Citizens’ Initiative Justice for Palestine had exceeded the required threshold in less than three months.

According to the group, the initiative also passed the national signature threshold in 11 EU member states, above the minimum of seven required under EU rules.

“This is the loudest democratic mandate the European Union has received on its foreign policy in years, and it leaves the Foreign Affairs Council with no excuse to delay any longer,” the alliance said in a statement.

The group accused Israel of continuing “to wage a genocide in Gaza,” intensifying “illegal annexation in the West Bank and East Jerusalem,” and carrying out strikes on Lebanon.

It argued that the actions constituted “systematic, documented violations of international humanitarian law, human rights, and of Article 2 of the EU-Israel Association Agreement.”

Read More: Spain to urge EU to end Israel agreement over war: Premier Sanchez

“The European Left Alliance demands that the Council immediately fully suspend the EU-Israel Association Agreement,” the statement said.

Concrete measures against Israel

International rights organizations on Monday urged the European Union to take concrete measures against Israel over human rights violations in Gaza and Lebanon, ahead of a key meeting of EU foreign ministers.

Speaking at an online press conference hosted by Human Rights Watch’s Brussels office, advocates said the bloc must move beyond expressions of concern and use its political and economic leverage to ensure accountability.

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