Marlborough Express

Teen shot five times protecting classmates

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UNITED STATES: A 15-year-old student who was shot five times during last week’s massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida is credited with saving the lives of at least 20 other students.

A fundraisin­g site says Anthony Borges was shot in both legs and his back while attempting to close and lock a classroom door last Wednesday. Seventeen people were killed.

Borges’ friend Carlos Rodriguez told ABC’s Good Morning America that the two rushed to hide in a nearby classroom when they first heard gunshots.

He says no-one knew what to do, but that Borges ``took the initiative to just save his other classmates’'.

Borges’ father Royer Borges says his son called him while lying on the ground after being shot. The father asked him to stay on the line, but at one point, he couldn’t hear the teenager’s voice anymore.

``He told me later `I had to drop the phone because I thought he was coming in and I wanted to pretend I was asleep so he wouldn’t continue shooting,’' Borges said.

Anthony Borges and his family are originally from Venezuela. His father says the boy is well-known among local sports clubs for his football skills, playing forward and training with Barcelona’s youth academy near Fort Lauderdale.

Moved by the Florida student’s actions, US footballer Landon Donovan rallied his fans to donate to help the teenager’s family.

``One of our own was a hero last week and needs our help,’' Donovan wrote on his Twitter account.

Borges’ GoFundMe had raised more than US$446,000 (NZ$610,000) as of Wednesday afternoon from nearly 14,000 donations. The legitimacy of the fundraisin­g page was confirmed by the Broward County Sheriff’s Office. – AP

Raiders take schoolgirl­s

More than a hundred schoolgirl­s are feared to have been abducted by Boko Haram in northern Nigeria. Witnesses to the raid, similar to one in 2014 in which 270 girls were taken by the Islamist group, said that heavily armed men had forced the secondary school pupils into lorries and driven them away. The girls had gathered before dinner on Monday evening, local time, near a mosque in the village of Dapchi, Yobe state, an area controlled by Boko Haram, when the raid began. Police said yesterday that as many as 111 pupils had been taken. One girl who escaped said that the men had fired their weapons and forced them into three vehicles.

Donald Jr in India

Donald Trump Jr said any talk of his family profiting from his father’s presidency is ‘‘nonsense’’ during a trip to India that has raised ethical concerns about using the name of the American president to promote internatio­nal business ventures. The eldest son of President Donald

Trump said his family is actually missing out on business opportunit­ies because his father pledged to conduct no new foreign business while he was in office. Trump Jr told Indian television channel CNBC-TV18 that when critics talk about them ‘‘profiteeri­ng from the presidency and all this nonsense’’ they forget about ‘‘the opportunit­y cost of the deals that we were not able to do. It’s sort of a shame.’’

Weinstein’s court bid

Harvey Weinstein wants a judge to dismiss a federal sexual misconduct lawsuit against him and invoked the words and actions of Oscar-winning actresses in his defence. Lawyers for the disgraced film mogul said in federal court in New York that the proposed class-action lawsuit filed by six women should be rejected because the alleged assaults took place too long ago and they failed to offer facts to support claims of racketeeri­ng. The lawsuit, which could potentiall­y involve hundreds of other women, said Weinstein assaulted young women trying to break into Hollywood and that his former film companies operated like an organised crime group to conceal widespread sexual harassment and assaults.

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