Financial Times FT.com

Village of Schengen symbolic of union

By Sarah Laitner in Schengen, Luxembourg

Published: December 20 2007 19:43 | Last updated: December 20 2007 19:43

Many mornings, Armindo Teixeira, a Portuguese restaurateur living in Luxembourg, has an unusual breakfast routine. It spans three countries.

“I take my coffee in Germany, buy my croissant in France, and eat in Luxembourg. There’s no passport to stop you. You travel, you are free,” says Mr Teixeira, 51, who is based in Schengen, at the geographical meeting point of three EU nations.

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