First of all, welcome back to the motherland!
Now I would guess that this is mainly down to our mysterious 3rd wire we like to call the earth, or 'CPC'. With the addition of this wire, we can use a device on the consumer unit called an RCD to measure the current on the live and neutral wires, with the device cutting off the electric the moment that the current becomes inballanced. The idea behind this, is that if you get a fault where something becomes live that shouldn't be, the current will travel down the CPC and the system will cut off before you learn to fly.
Which brings us onto mixed neutrals. It is common place to find boards which offer a split between RCD use and not (or even multiple RCD's, or both). This is so that even in an earth fault, some equipment will still work, important stuff like fire alarms and kettles (if i'm going to die I want a brew!). Now imagine that the neutral for your sockets is mixed up in your fire alarm neutral, where the fire alarm is not RCD protected but your sockets are. Some of that current is going to flow down the fire alarms neutral, so as soon as you plug something in, the RCD measures different amounts of current and off goes the power.
And that's at least one reason why it's generally a bad idea to mix neutrals.
It's also common place to have the live wire from the light at the bottom of the stairs taken up to the top of the stairs in this country, meaning that the downstairs circuit is connected to the neutral of the upstairs. Which works fine, till you throw an RCD into the equation
Also, what he said ^^