A TASTE OF THE
ORIENT COMES TO PYRAMIDS SHOPPING CENTRE
A TASTE of the Orient has
come to a Birkenhead shopping centre with the arrival of a new fast
food outlet which has created 4 new jobs.
Chopstix noodle bar at Pyramids Shopping Centre is now serving in
the food court and follows on from a bumper few months of new
business openings.
Derek Millar, Commercial Director for Pyramids Shopping Centre,
said:- "We now have a full and very bustling food court which
serves as a great place for our visitors, close to 14 million a
year, to come and relax after a busy day of shopping at our
fantastic range of shops which have swelled in recent months.
Chopstix is the 8th business to open here over the last few months
and follows on from the much anticipated arrival of global fashion
giant H&M and a world first Liverpool Football Club store.
We have also welcomed stores such as Bowtique ladies accessories and
Smiffy's fancy dress which are bringing something a bit different to
the fold.
All of this on top of a £1m investment at the centre which has
already started with modernisation at the Pyramids car park and will
also include an extensive rebrand and face lift for the site.
It's a very exciting time for all the team here and for new
businesses to join us as we look forward to the future at Pyramids
Shopping Centre with an enormous sense of optimism."
Chopstix, which serves noodles, rice, chicken and vegetarian dishes,
already has 15 outlets throughout the UK, including Essex,
Cambridge, Bristol, West Lothian and Norwich with a further 12 more
due to be open next year.
Manager of the Birkenhead branch, Camilia Mutu, said:- "People
love our food because it is fast, tasty and reasonable in price and
we think it brings something different to the food court at Pyramids
Shopping Centre.
Customers like the fact they can see what they are buying beforehand
and enjoy looking over the dishes and choosing what they like the
look of best.
We chose the shopping centre because the food court is already busy
and has other, popular fast food brands. Chicken is our speciality
and we have an amazing range, including Malaysian chicken, sweet and
sour chicken and lemon chicken. We find customers have their
favourites and it keeps them coming back for more!"
LOST MEDICATION - SOUTHPORT
MERSEYSIDE Police are appealing for the public
to be cautious after prescription medication is believed to have
been lost on a bus in Southport, on Friday, 22 November 2013. It's
thought the medication was left on an Arriva 385 service at around
6.45am in a small black Nike bag. The bag contained just less than a
month's supply of Zopiclone sleeping tablets, and Clopidogrel blood
thinning tablets as well as water tablets, cholesterol tablets,
anti-reflux tablets, thyroid tablets and an inhaler. Enquiries are
continuing. Officers would like to remind people that taking
medication which isn't prescribed for them can be dangerous and can
even prove fatal. Anyone who finds any of this medication is asked
to hand it in to a local Pharmacy or any Police Station. |
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Siemens to stop
investment if Britain leaves EU
THE managing director of
Siemens UK has warned that his company would stop investing in
factories in the UK if it was not part of the EU.
He added that leaving the EU would be "disastrous" for
British manufacturers. This follows a poll last month which found
that 80% of manufacturers want to remain in the EU.
Siemens employs 13,000 people across the country including hundreds
of people in the North West at sites in Congleton, Manchester and
Ulverston.
North West Liberal Democrat MEP Chris Davies said:- "Siemens
employ hundreds of people from the far south to the far north of my
constituency.
For these people it is a stark choice of in Europe, in work or out
of Europe and uncertainty.
UKIP and their allies on the extreme right wing of the Conservative
Party need to remember that they are putting jobs at risk with their
shrill screaming about the EU.
Thousands of jobs are created each year by foreign investors who see
Britain as a launch-pad into the world's largest single market.
Leaving the EU would mean losing that status and putting crucial
jobs and investment at risk.
We can better build a stronger economy by working with our European
neighbours rather than shouting from the outside."
Green MEPs Cameron's clampdown on
'benefits tourism' is destructive myth-making
THE Prime Minister David
Cameron's proposed clampdown on so-called 'benefits tourism' is
rhetoric based on myths which will hurt not help the health of the
British economy and society, say Green MEPs Jean Lambert and Keith
Taylor.
Cameron has set out radical plans to overhaul welfare rules
including stopping new arrivals from the European Union getting
out-of-work benefits for three months.
Lambert, London's Green MEP and the Green Party's immigration
spokesperson, said:- "This is all about deflecting attention
from benefit cuts, and not really about protecting UK benefits and
public services at all. 'Benefit Tourism' is a myth - not borne out
by the facts at all, as the EU Commission and the OECD have made
clear. In fact, those born outside the UK tend to pay more tax, and
claim fewer benefits, than those born here; they are, as a group,
net contributors to the public purse. Overwhelmingly, people come
here to work and some come because they feel safer here than in
their home country; both of these say very positive things about the
UK. Cameron prefers not to recognise that; he's too busy looking for
the next set of benefit cuts."
Taylor, Green MEP for South East England, said:- "A great
tragedy of the latest round of immigration myth-making is the utter
reluctance of the old political parties to stand up to the Tories on
this. We'd expect nothing sensible from UKIP of course, but for the
Lib-Dems and Labour to perpetuate these myths is deeply
disappointing. This hard talking rhetoric from the Government is
based on myths. We know that the effects of so-called 'benefits
tourists' has been shown to be hugely overblown. Indeed we also know
that the UK makes full use of free movement in Europe with hundreds
of thousands of British Nationals living in other EU countries. Yet
time and time again the Government shift the blame for the problems
we face onto new arrivals in the UK. The proposal to deport rough
sleepers from other EU countries is truly cruel."
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