More than 457,000 European citizens have signed a petition to fully suspend the European Union’s partnership agreement with Israel. The petition, launched on January 13, aims to gather 1 million signatures from at least seven EU countries by January 13 next year. It calls for suspension because Israel is accused of violating the EU’s human rights clause in the agreement. The petition states, "EU citizens cannot tolerate that the EU maintains an agreement that contributes to legitimize and finance a State that commits crimes against humanity and war crimes." It cites large-scale civilian killings, displacement, hospital destruction in Gaza, blockade of humanitarian aid, and ignoring International Court of Justice orders. Signatures have come from all 27 EU countries, showing widespread support. France leads with 203,182 signatories, about 45% of the total. Spain and Italy follow with 60,087 and 54,821 signatures, respectively. Smaller countries like Belgium, Finland, Sweden, and Ireland also show strong backing. Several countries have met or exceeded their national thresholds, meaning the petition meets the EU’s geographic rules to push the issue for official review. Germany shows lower participation in the petition despite large protests, reflecting political and legal challenges there. The petition is a serious democratic tool, not just street protests. If it reaches 1 million signatures, the European Commission must formally consider the suspension demand. While the commission is not legally forced to act, the petition signals strong public pressure. The EU, standing for human rights and international law, now faces a test of its principles. This campaign shows citizen power moving from protests to formal demands inside the EU’s democratic system. The EU-Israel partnership suspension issue has entered a new phase of political urgency and visibility.