The first weekend of the summer holidays has been plunged into chaos as British families heading to Europe face huge delays at train stations and on motorways today.
Holidaymakers are facing long tailbacks at the Port of Dover amid a ‘weekend of woe’ on Britain’s roads, while delays are being felt across the Gatwick Express and the Eurostar.
Huge queues have formed at London’s St Pancras station after a series of fires hit French high-speed rail lines, hours before the Paris Olympic Games opening ceremony.
Several Eurostar trains to Paris have been cancelled and others diverted after ‘co-ordinated acts of malice’ in France.
The rail operator, which runs international services from London St Pancras, confirmed on Friday its trains would be delayed because of the ongoing issues over the Channel.
The disruption comes hours ahead of the opening of the Paris 2024 Olympic Games and as millions embark on summer getaways.
French rail company SNCF said a series of incidents overnight had affected travel to and from London beneath the Channel, to Belgium and across the west, north and east of France.
Three fires were reported near the tracks of the French Atlantique, Nord and Est high-speed lines by local media.
Eurostar said: ‘Due to co-ordinated acts of malice in France, affecting the high-speed line between Paris and Lille, all high-speed trains going to and coming from Paris are being diverted via the classic line today Friday July 26.
‘This extends the journey time by around an hour-and-a-half. Several trains have been cancelled.
‘Eurostar’s teams are fully mobilised in stations, in the call centres, and onboard to ensure that all passengers are informed and can reach their destination.’
The company said customers were being informed via email, text and on the Eurostar website.
Any affected passengers can cancel or refund their tickets or modify their journey free of charge.
In Britain, the RAC has warned of delays all week after schools broke up for the summer holidays and they have dubbed today as ‘Frantic Friday’ with an estimated 3.2million cars set to his the road.
Thousands of cars are already stuck in long queues at Dover, with border processing times currently taking 40 minutes.
The chaos follows major travel disruption since last Friday after a flawed IT update by cybersecurity firm CrowdStrike knocked many global services offline.