All Eurostar Paris trains cancelled on Friday amid French rail disruption over suspected WW2 bomb – Europe live | Ukraine
All Eurostar services to and from Paris today cancelled
Eurostar has just confirmed to the Guardian that “all Eurostar trains are cancelled to and from Paris today.”
That includes all services on lines: London-Paris, Paris-London, Brussels-Paris and Paris-Brussels.
“Customers can exchange their ticket for free to travel at a different time or date in the same travel class. This is subject to availability,” it added.
A view of a departures screen at St Pancras International station in London, after Eurostar trains to the capital have been halted following the discovery of an unexploded second world war bomb near the tracks in Paris. Photograph: James Manning/PA
Key events
Jakub Krupa
We are focusing on travel disruptions over in France this morning after an unexploded bomb from the second world war was discovered overnight in the suburb of Saint Denis, causing widespread disruption to trains out of Gare du Nord in Paris in the direction of northern France and across the channel.
All Eurostar trains to and from Paris today have been cancelled.
But as the travel situation is expected to get better later in the day, we will later pivot back to Ukraine, including updates from European Council president António Costa’s conversations with non-EU leaders as he updates them on last night’s EU summit.
'Massive' Russian attack on Ukraine overnight
Meanwhile, in Ukraine… Russia launched a “massive” drone and missile attack on Ukrainian energy facilities early Friday, just days after President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and European allies proposed that Moscow and Kyiv halt strikes on critical infrastructure, AFP reported.
The Ukrainian air force said Russia had launched at least 58 missiles and nearly 200 drones, damaging energy facilities across the country from Kharkiv in the east to Ternopil in the west.
DTEK, the largest private energy supplier in Ukraine, said its facilities in the Black Sea region of Odesa were targeted for a fourth night in a row.
Ukraine’s energy minister German Galushchenko said Russia was trying to “hurt ordinary Ukrainians by shelling energy and gas production facilities”.
Emergency teams and civilians are at the scene where a Russian Iskander missile hit a civilian infrastructure facility, causing an explosion and therefore fire and damage in ten garages and five cars in Kharkiv, Ukraine. Photograph: Anadolu/Getty ImagesA resident stands near a house destroyed by a Russian drone strike, amid Russia's attack on Ukraine. Photograph: Nina Liashonok/Reuters
Train disruptions in Paris - in pictures
French police officers block the access to the SNCF's freight area in Saint-Denis, northern suburb of Paris. Photograph: Geoffroy van der Hasselt/AFP/Getty ImagesPassengers wait inside the departure hall as traffic has been disrupted at the Gare du Nord train station in Paris. Photograph: Benoît Tessier/ReutersPassengers stand next to information screens at the departure hall as traffic has been disrupted at the Gare du Nord train station. Photograph: Benoît Tessier/ReutersPassengers at St Pancras International station in London, after Eurostar trains to the capital have been halted following the discovery of an unexploded second world war bomb near the tracks in Paris. Photograph: James Manning/PA
All Eurostar services to and from Paris today cancelled
Eurostar has just confirmed to the Guardian that “all Eurostar trains are cancelled to and from Paris today.”
That includes all services on lines: London-Paris, Paris-London, Brussels-Paris and Paris-Brussels.
“Customers can exchange their ticket for free to travel at a different time or date in the same travel class. This is subject to availability,” it added.
A view of a departures screen at St Pancras International station in London, after Eurostar trains to the capital have been halted following the discovery of an unexploded second world war bomb near the tracks in Paris. Photograph: James Manning/PA
No regional trains until mid-afternoon, RER B operator confirms
Regional traffic from Paris Gare du Nord will not resume before mid-afternoon, the train operator of the RER B line confirmed in a social media post.
Passengers queue to take a bus from Opera district, in order to reach Paris Charles-de-Gaulle Airport (CDG), as train traffic has been stopped at the Gare du Nord station in Paris. Photograph: Geoffroy van der Hasselt/AFP/Getty Images
'Change your journey for different date,' Eurostar says
Eurostar has issued an update on its website saying that they were “expecting disruption to our services in and out of Paris this morning,” and advising passengers to “please change your journey for a different date of travel.”
In a further statement to the Guardian, it added that Eurostar cancelled all trains to and from Paris until midday CET (11am GMT).
Eurostar sincerely apologises for the disruption and understands the inconvenience this may cause.
Services between Brussels – Marne La Vallée, London – Brussels and London – Amsterdam are running normally, it added.
A view of a departures board at St Pancras International station in London, after Eurostar trains to the capital have been halted following the discovery of an unexploded second world war bomb near the tracks in Paris. Photograph: James Manning/PA
French transport minister Philippe Tabarot spoke about the incident on Sud Radio earlier this morning.
He indicated that disruptions were likely to continue throughout the day, potentially with limited traffic restored “by the afternoon.”
Regional train operator running one of the five regional lines RER, RER B, suggested in a social media post that there are plans to resume some train connections from 10am local time, but added “there is a good chance it will be pushed back,” meaning disruptions may continue into the day.
You can check live travel updates from Paris du Nord here and for Eurostar services here (from Gare du Nord) and here (from London).
This photograph shows a blank information screen as traffic has been stopped at the Gare du Nord station in Paris. Photograph: Geoffroy van der Hasselt/AFP/Getty Images
Paris Gare du Nord is the busiest train station in Europe, with over 250 million passengers a year using it with all transport modes, which gives you an idea of the scale of disruption this morning.
Passengers wait as Eurostar trains to London and all trains heading to northern France have been brought to a halt following the discovery of an unexploded bomb dating back to the second world war near the tracks. Photograph: Samuel Petrequin/AP
Morning opening: 'Watershed moment' for Europe - now what?
Jakub Krupa
European leaders have reaffirmed their “continued and unwavering support for Ukraine’s independence, sovereignty and territorial integrity within its internationally recognised borders” on Thursday night, as they announced plans to massively increase defence spending.
European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen called it “a watershed moment” for Europe.
Setting out their red lines, the EU countries – without Hungary, which refused to sign the conclusions – agreed there can be no negotiation about Ukraine without Ukraine, any truce should only be part of a lasting and comprehensive peace agreement, and Ukraine needs to be put in the strongest possible position to negotiate its future.
But the key thing is a clear commitment to spend more, produce more, and streamline procurement processes to rearm Europe.
Since Donald Trump was inaugurated as the US president and put a question mark over US support for Europe, a number of EU countries have revised their defence spending targets, and more are planning to do so in the coming weeks.
The feeling among European leaders was best captured by the Danish prime minister Mette Frederiksen:
I do not think we have a lot of time. So [we need to] rearm Europe: spend, spend, spend on defence and deterrence.
The political signal from last night’s meeting of the European Council, attended by Zelenskyy, was clear. Now, it’s about the implementation of these decisions.
Ursula Von der Leyen , the president of the European Commission (L) and António Costa, the president of European Council address media during a press conference in Brussels. Photograph: Wiktor Dąbkowski/ZUMA Press Wire/REX/Shutterstock
Separately, Zelenskyy and the US side indicated that they are likely to meet next week, potentially to sign the much-awaited minerals deal, which could help progress the Trump-led peace process. But there is still a lot of distrust and questions over the US motivations, and on whether Russia is genuinely prepared to sit down to talk about peace given it continues to attack Ukraine.
Top EU officials, European Commission president Ursula von der Leyen and European Council president António Costa will debrief other non-EU leaders on last night’s talk today, including the UK.
I will bring you all reactions and other developments across Europe.
It’s Friday, 7 March 2025, and this is Europe live. It’s Jakub Krupa here.
Good morning.
Eurostar, French trains disrupted due to suspected unexploded WW2 bomb
Eurostar trains between London and northern France and French trains TGV, RER, and TER have been suspended after a suspected object was found near Paris Gare du Nord, Paris North, train station.
A social media account of RER B line reported the disruption was caused by a suspected unexploded bomb from the second world war,
French media said it was discovered during overnight maintenance works on railway tracks in the commune of Saint Denis, with emergency services attending.
Severe travel disruptions are expected as a result.