akos hadhazy waits in vain to hear from brussels. damien: my german colleague , hanni huesch, has been reporting on britain with great affection for years. but since the u.k. voted to leave the european union in a referendum in june, for the first time she's now wondering if the country is as welcoming as she thought. there are countless reports of xenophobic comments. one hungarian friend told me that the day after the vote, she was shouted out by someone in the london underground because she was talking hungarian to her 5-year-old son. and the other day, a german friend of mine wasn't let in to a manchester nightclub because, as the bouncer put it, "no krauts tonight." hanni is puzzled and worried by all this. and so she's decided to talk to people on both sides of the debate, to find out if the uk is still the country she loves. hanni: bernard feels most at home when he's surrounded by his antiques. now that his party, the populist and anti-european ukip, has achieved its goal, he can devote more of his time again to the business