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23 September 2006
A Eurostar tale
"taking the train to Brussels from London"
By: Nicholas Newman
‘Champagne sir?’ the waitress said, startling the passengers
seated around the table in business class as the Eurostar
dashed through the Kent countryside for the Channel Tunnel
Conversations of current events on most railway journeys with
fellow passengers are often desultory and seldom profound. Such
was not the case on my recent journey by Eurostar to Brussels
where a wide range of differing opinions were expressed by
cosmopolitan fellow travellers and enlivened by a first class
menu and lubricated by an excellent vintage.
Seated with me, as I had already discovered was an elegantly
dressed German business women named Trudy; Robin a stocky
senior British government official and Jaan a Polish footballer
on his way to try out for the Belgium football team
Anderlecht.
As the champagne was served, I noticed Trudy reading on her
laptop about Tesco recruiting Poles to work in their
supermarkets. ‘That’s interesting.’ I commented.
Trudy laughed, ‘Yes… that certainly explains my servant
problem.’ Trudy went on to explain that she had bought back her
old ancestral home from the Polish government. Her family had
been one of the Prussian aristocracy that had all their
property confiscated after the last war and been forced to flee
to Germany.
What she found was a ruin, the ballroom was a pigsty. It took
her several years to buy it back; her mother cried when she saw
the sorry state their former home. Trudy was having a terrible
problem finding builders to restore the place. She had been in
England to recruit Polish builders to return back to Poland to
repair her ancestral home. ‘It’s a bit like the old English
saying of sending coals to Newcastle, i.e. pointless since coal
is produced in the Newcastle area.’ I laughed.
‘So I must be… a coal to Newcastle’ Jaan broke into the
conversation as the first course of Norwegian smoked salmon
with a dill taboulleh and a lemon wedge was served. ‘I have
just been trying out at Arsenal and am on my way to Anderlecht,
I can’t make up my mind which team to join,’ he added. It
turned out Jaan had been invited by various European clubs to
join them. His agent had gone ahead to Brussels to open
negotiations. Jaan said: ‘I think what will decide it will be
where my girlfriend has a job, she’s working as a doctor at
London’s Great Ormond Street Children’s Hospital.’
I remarked: ‘It seems there are now one million Poles in
Britain, London is being colonized by poles and I expect the
new leadership in Poland is not improving things.’
‘Oh you mean the terrible twins, Jaroslaw the Prime Minister
and President Lech Kaczynski.’ Trudy interjected ‘they are
making Poland a laughing stock with their views about hanging,
gay rights and abortion.’ Jaan added ‘They seem to be doing
little about tackling Poland’s corruption problem; it’s almost
as if all this talk about returning to old family values is
part of their way to divert the Polish public from the real
problems facing the country.’
As the second course, Duck confit with a peach sauce, sugar
snap peas and grilled potatoes was served and our champagne
glasses were recharged, Robin changed the subject with the
question ‘What do you think about nuclear power?’ We all
answered we were for it. It turned out Robin was on his way to
the European Commission to raise an extra $200m for a $600m
project to build a new containment building to entomb the
reactor that was the site of the accident at the Chernobyl
nuclear power plant site.
The existing containment building, built in a hurry after the
accident twenty years ago, is crumbling. ‘The trouble is the
French contractors supervising the construction have discovered
they need extra money and time to complete the project.’ Robin
observed. His task in Brussels was to meet with representative
of the European Commission and G8 to raise the extra money. He
thought, as usual, that the Americans would be footing most of
the bill, with the EU giving $20m. As for Russia’s
contribution, it will depend on how generous they feel towards
their current government in Kiev.
Trudy asked Robin ‘Have you been to Chernobyl?’ In fact it
emerged that Robin regularly visits the site as part of the
International Atomic Energy Agency inspection team. What
surprised him was how all the gloom and doom merchants
predictions had been proved wrong. He went on to explain that
because people had been evacuated, wildlife was doing very well
and did not seem to be suffering from the effects of the
radiation that had escaped due to the accident.
As for the people who were exposed in the area around the
plant, they are more likely to die of lung cancer and poverty
than from any direct affects of the accident of the accident
the IAEA experts had concluded. Apart from the workers involved
in the misfortune, there have been very few directly
attributable deaths.
‘More champagne, coffee or tea’ the waitress said as we tucked
into our Cherry tart desert as the train sped away from
Lille.
‘Well since we are in France, who do you think will win next
year’s French presidential election?’ I said and added. ‘Will
it be the socialist politician Ségolène Royal or the
conservative one Nicolas Sarkozy?’ We had a heated discussion
about the relative merits of these two candidates, their
policies, scandals and this being France their love lives. What
came out was that their nomination as their respective party’s
presidential candidates was not a done deal. Trudy agued ‘if
the old political dinosaurs in the Socialist Party, like Jack
Lang, let Madame Royal win the parties nomination, then there
dreams of ever becoming president are over.
“The same goes for Monsieur Sarkozy; President Chirac regards
Nicolas as a traitor to his political legacy and too popular by
half for his own good.’ She went on to explain she thought
Chirac has adopted the uncharismatic French Prime Minister De
Villepin as his political heir in his desperate attempts to
stop Nicolas Sarkozy getting his party’s nomination. Robin
commented ‘in France the early front runner usually does not
make it to the final hurdle.’
At this moment there was announcement that the train would be
soon arriving in Brussels, we packed up and said our goodbyes
and the train came to a halt at Brussels’ Eurostar terminal. We
left the train in a good mood and exhilarated by both the good
meal and wide ranging conversation. Where else, except on
Eurostar could one have enjoyed such an experience?
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