Model and celebrity Katie Price (pictured) is set to walk down the aisle for a third time.

The 33-year-old mum-of-three will marry her Argentinian boyfriend Leandro Penna though a date for their nuptials has not been announced.

The former Page 3 girl – who shot to fame as glamour model Jordan – was first married in 2005 to pop singer Peter Andre, with whom she has two children, Junior, six, and Princess, four. After the couple split up Ms Price went on to marry cross-dressing cage fighter Alex Reid in Las Vegas in August 2010.

Their whirlwind romance was quickly over and she went on to meet Mr Penna, 26. Ms Price also has a son Harvey, aged nine, by footballer Dwight Yorke. (PA)

Sea drill sets new record

A Japanese research institute says its deep-sea drilling probe has set a new world record for depth, reaching 7,740 metres below the sea surface.

The Chikyu, operated by the Japan Agency for Marine-Earth Science and Technology, was digging the seabed off Japan’s northern coast to take fault samples and study last year’s devastating earthquake and tsunami.

Maritime organisations say the US vessel Glomar Challenger set the previous record of 7,049.5 metres below sea surface in the Mariana Trench in 1978. (PA)

Roadside bomb kills 10 police

Ten policemen were killed after a roadside bomb ripped through their patrol vehicle in central Afghanistan.

The bomb struck their pickup truck in the restive Chak district of Maidan Wardak province on Friday.

The Taliban immediately claimed responsibility for the attack, but put the death toll at seven. Taliban militants have recently increased their attacks on Afghan officials and security forces.

Earlier yesterday, an attack on the governor’s compound in southern Kandahar province left four people dead, including the two attackers. (AFP)

New round of nuclear talks

Iran’s state TV said a new round of talks between Tehran and the UN’s nuclear agency will be held in Vienna on May 13-14.

The report yesterday quoted Ali Asghar Soltanieh, who is Iran’s chief delegate to the International Atomic Energy Agency, as saying that talks will focus on resolving “questions” about Tehran’s alleged attempt to develop nuclear weapons.

IAEA inspectors have demanded access to a military complex where the agency suspects secret atomic work has been carried out.

Iran says inspectors will be allowed to visit the Parchin military site as a goodwill gesture, but it would require agreement between the two sides on guidelines for the inspection. (PA)

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