Australia govt, miners on brink of tax deal -report

July 1 (Reuters) – Australia’s government and key mining companies are on the brink of a framework agreement on a mining tax compromise, the Sydney Morning Herald reported, quoting sources with knowledge of the talks.

Based on the proposed deal, the new trigger point for the tax would be the 10-year Australian government bond yield plus 7 percentage points, or around 12 percent now, up from an initial proposal for 5 percent, the paper said on its website on Thursday. (Reporting by Balazs Koranyi; Editing by Ed Davies)

Champion Kuznetsova back from brink to reach third round

Reigning champion Svetlana Kuznetsova held on by her fingernails at the French Open on Wednesday, saving four match points against Germany’s Andrea Petkovic to keep alive her hopes of defending the title.

The Russian sixth seed was on the brink when Petkovic served at 5-4, 40-0 in the second set of a rain-interrupted scrap on Court One but survived to win 4-6 7-5 6-4.

Petkovic’s nerves got the better of her as she wasted all her match points with unforced errors and Kuznetsova, who had been woefully off from, took full advantage.

Kuznetsova also wobbled serving at 5-3 in the decider as Petkovic broke back but sealed victory on her fourth match point in the next game when her opponent drilled a backhand long.

(Editing by Miles Evans.

To query or comment on this story email sportsfeedback@thomsonreuters.com)

Nepal parties fail to forge consensus on CA term extension

Kathmandu, May 26 — Nepal seems headed for a crisis with the much-expected meeting of the three main political parties failing to forge a consensus on extending tenure of the Constituent Assembly on Friday evening. The meeting between the ruling Nepali Congress and CPN (UML) and the opposition Maoists failed as both factions stuck to their previous demands.

They have agreed, however, to meet again on Thursday. While the Maoists sought resignation of Prime Minister Madhav Kumar Nepal as condition to support extension of the CA tenure the ruling parties refused and asked the main opposition party to agree on contentious issues like integration of former Maoist rebels first.

“The ruling parties are pushing the country to the brink of confrontation and a conspiracy is being hatched to derail the peace process,” said UCPN (Maoist) vice chairman Narayan Kaji Shrestha after the meeting. The tenure of the Constituent Assembly expires on May 28 and there is no possibility of the new constitution getting promulgated on time.

World”s smallest waterlily saved from extinction

Washington, May 19 (ANI): African waterlily, which is believed to be the smallest waterlily in the world with pads than can be as little as 1cm in diameter, has been brought back from the brink of extinction thanks to horticulturist Carlos Magdalena.

This ”thermal” waterlily (Nymphaea thermarum), so named because it grows in freshwater hot springs, was discovered in 1985 by German botanist Professor Eberhard Fischer of Koblenz-Landau Univeristy, Germany. It was endemic to just one known location in Mashyuza, Rwanda, in the south west of the country. However, it disappeared from this location about two years ago due to over-exploitation of the hot spring that fed its fragile habitat. Water was prevented from reaching the earth”s surface resulting in the desiccation of the few square metres where this species grew and no plant is known to have survived in the wild.

Luckily, Professor Eberhard Fischer realised that the species was in jeopardy and he transported a few specimens to Bonn Botanic Gardens soon after its discovery. At Bonn, horticulturists were successful at preserving these valuable specimens and indeed they lasted for more than a decade. However, the species proved extremely difficult to propagate.

As a result of a conservation plant exchange between Bonn and Kew, a handful of seeds and pre-germinated seedlings reached Kew in July 2009. All other known waterlily species start life as submerged plants until large enough to send pads to the surface. Therefore Nymphaea thermarum seedlings were initially grown submerged like any other waterlily. But, at both botanic gardens, this method was unsatisfactory: seedlings were barely clinging on to life and did not develop to adult stages.

Carlos, who has a track record of bringing the rarest and most difficult plants back from the brink, took on the challenge of learning the secrets of successfully propagating Nymphaea thermarum over many months.

He ran a series of trials involving a range of temperatures, water hardness, pH and depth. Plants grown in harder water at shallower depths seemed to develop further. However, no plant reached maturity, which was disappointing; as it seemed that every possible permutation known to have an influence on aquatic plant growth had been tested. Everything except the concentration of CO2 and other gases, such as O2, which are found in much smaller concentrations in water than in the air. Or, perhaps there was something crucial in the natural habitat of which he was not aware?

So the next step was clear: Carlos needed to start investigating ways to increase the carbon dioxide concentration in the water available to the plants whilst gathering information on the natural habitat.

Returning to the original German description of the species and its natural habitat supplied the final clue: “it grows in damp mud caused by the overflow of a hot spring. Water reaches the surface at 50C but the plant colonizes an area where the water has cooled to a temperature of 25C”. This meant that, unlike all other known waterlily species, Nymphaea thermarum did not grow submerged in the deep waters of lakes, rivers or marshes. The revelation was that this small, extremely rare and unusual species, with a spread of only 5 to 20cm, grows in the damp conditions at the edge of a thermal hot spring – and this was the vital clue needed to crack the code.

With this knowledge Carlos did one final trial. He placed seeds and seedlings into pots of loam within small containers filled with water, thus keeping the water at the same level as the surface of the compost, at a temperature of 25 degree C. In this way, the last remaining individuals of the species could be exposed to the higher concentrations of carbon dioxide and oxygen in the air. And to his surprise and joy, soon the plants started to improve and after a few weeks, eight plants began to flourish, growing to maturity with thicker, greener and wider leaves. In November 2009, Kew”s collection of Nymphea thermarum flowered for the first time.

Carlos Magdalena said: “When I received this donation from Bonn, I realised how important it was for the survival of the species to find a way of growing them successfully. At first they didn”t seem to respond to any of the traditional ways of treating these plants and they remained weak and failed to develop and eventually died. It was only when I searched a little deeper that the key I needed came to the surface. Now we have over 30 healthy baby plants growing here at Kew and some are producing seeds so soon we may have an army of these tiny waterlilies here at Kew. Its future in botanical collections seems secured for the long term.”

He added: “Waterlilies are among the most ancient of flowering plants. This species could provide information about the evolution of flowering plants as it is truly unique. Our immediate priority is the ex situ conservation of the species and thereafter, if the natural flow of water in its historic location can be restored, plants grown at Kew can then be reintroduced into the wild. Also, this species may provide an opportunity to breed beautiful small and compact waterlily hybrids that don”t need a pond. Gardeners would love something like this, the advent of the ”no-waterlily”.”(ANI)

Ancelotti wants Torres to play for Chelsea

London, May 14 (ANI): Chelsea boss Carlo Ancelotti has admitted for the first time that he would like to see Liverpool striker Fernando Torres playing for them.

Chelsea owner Roman Abramovich is willing to give 50 million pounds needed for Torres and Blues striker Didier Drogba is also keen to link up with the Spanish ace.

Ancelotti said: “It’s not only Drogba – I would like to play with Torres. He’s a very good player. But this is not an issue for now. He is a Liverpool player and is a good striker but we have two fantastic strikers and this is not for this moment.”

Ancelotti is on the brink of winning a second trophy in his maiden season, The Sun reports.

He praised the work of Portsmouth manager Avram Grant, while admitting that Chelsea’s victory at Fratton Park two months ago was the turning point of their season.

“That game was an important game for us because it was a difficult moment. At the time they didn’t have much motivation but, on Saturday, they have a lot of motivation in the final,” Ancelotti said.

“Avram is a very good coach. He was here in Chelsea for one year and did a very good job. And also this year, Portsmouth have had a difficult year but he did well to take them to the final and get his players to go out with strong, strong motivation,” he added. (ANI)

Lampard hails Chelsea’s fighting spirit

London, May 3 (ANI): Chelsea skipper Frank Lampard has hailed the fighting spirit of his side.

Speaking after the team’s two-nil victory over Liverpool on Sunday, Lampard said: “We hit a low point a couple of months ago, so you have to give credit to everyone – the players, the management, the staff.”

“We dug ourselves out of it and we are now on the brink of doing the double. Now, it would be nice to win it next week in front of our own fans – and we have an FA Cup final after that too,” The Sun quoted Lampard, as saying further.

Amazingly, Lamps was overlooked when it came to this term”s PFA Team of the Season – yet boss Carlo Ancelotti was determined to pay tribute to the England midfield man.

Ancelotti insisted: “I”m not surprised he scored because Frank has 26 goals this season. (ANI)

Prince Charles teams up with NBC for green campaign

Melbourne, April 29 (ANI): Britain’s Prince Charles has teamed up with NBC for ‘Green Is Universal’ campaign.

The Royal will offer up a heart-rending look at his work on climate change in Harmony, a feature-length program to be broadcast during NBC”s Green Week this November, reports News.com.au.

“The Prince of Wales has such a passion and vision in providing leadership on this crucial climate issue that confronts the world,” said Paul Telegdy, executive vice president of alternative programming at NBC.

“We are honored to partner with him to showcase these issues that are important to American audiences.”

In a clip from Harmony, the Prince said that many people never took the issue of climate change seriously and thought it was “pretty crazy” when he initiated the topic twenty-two years ago.

“I can only somehow imagine that I find myself being born into this position for a purpose,” he said.

“We have lost something very precious and that is an understanding of an inter-connectedness with nature. Just as mankind has the power to push the world to the brink, so too does he have the power to restore it,” he added. (ANI)

Hewitt makes winning return in Houston

Lleyton Hewitt has won his first match since post-Australian Open hip surgery to claw his way into the quarter-finals of the US Men’s Clay Court Championship in Houston.

The defending champion battled back from the brink of defeat on Thursday to notch a 1-6, 6-0, 7-6 (7-2) second-round victory over Indian Somdev Devvarman.

After enjoying a first-round bye, the fourth-seeded Hewitt looked out of sorts before roaring back to concede just two points in the second set.

But Devvarman – a two-time American NCAA singles champion – put forth a stronger challenge in the decisive set.

The world number 116 twice recovered a break of serve, including one in the ninth game with Hewitt holding the match on his racquet, and then earned his own opportunity to serve out the match at 6-5.

Hewitt fought off elimination with another service break, and then clinched the win in the tiebreak as he reeled off the final six points.

Hewitt, 29, had been sidelined since January after undergoing surgery on his right hip, and made his return to the courts on Tuesday with a first-round doubles victory with his coach Nathan Healey.

He had opened the 2010 season with as quarter-final run in Sydney and fourth-round showing in Melbourne, where he lost to eventual champion Roger Federer.

Hewitt faces Argentine veteran Juan Ignacio Chela next for a place in the semi-finals.

Study shines light on near-death experiences

People who have “near-death experiences,” such as flashing lights, feelings of peace and joy and divine encounters before they pull back from the brink may simply have raised levels of carbon dioxide (CO2) in the blood, a study suggests.

Near-death experiences (NDEs) are reported by between 11 and 23 percent of survivors of heart attacks, according to previous research.

But what causes NDEs is strongly debated. Some pin the mechanisms on physical or psychological reasons, while others see a transcendental force.

Researchers in Slovenia, reporting in a peer-reviewed journal, Critical Care, investigated 52 consecutive cases of heart attacks in three large hospitals.

The patients’ average age was 53 years. Forty-two of them were men.

Eleven patients had NDEs, but there was no common link between these cases in terms of age, sex, level of education, religious belief, fear of death, time to recovery or the drugs that were administered to resuscitate them.

Instead, a common association was high levels of CO2 in the blood and, to a lesser degree, of potassium.

Further work is needed to confirm the findings among a larger sample of patients, say the authors, led by Zalika Klemenc-Ketis of the University of Maribor.

Having an NDE can be a life-changing experience, so understanding its causes is important for heart-attack survivors, they say.

Push on to save threatened banksia

The Department of Environment and Conservation is pinning its hopes on three banksia orchards in the Albany area as it tries to regenerate the species which has been pushed to the brink of extinction.

The feather leafed banksia, found near Cheynes Beach and in the Stirling Range National Park, has been threatened by dieback in recent years and only 17 populations of the plant still exist in the wild.

Four-hundred banksia have since been planted in the orchards and will provide seed for future generations of the species and its reintroduction into the wild.

Summers: Economy on path to growth: FT

(Reuters) – The U.S. economy is on the path to achieving self-sustaining growth, although the jobs outlook remains uncertain, White House economic adviser Larry Summers said in a newspaper interview to be published on Saturday.

“I think the economy appears to be moving toward escape velocity,” Summers said in an interview with the Financial Times. “You hear a lot less talk of W-shaped recoveries and double-dips than you did six months ago.”

Summers, a former Treasury secretary who advises President Barack Obama, said the economic recovery appeared to have “started earlier and more vigorously” than in previous downturns.

Obama’s action on healthcare, energy and education should help to restore confidence and stimulate the economy in the months ahead, Summers added.

However, he warned that it was still unclear whether companies would start taking on more workers or whether more action is needed to fuel the recovery.

“Whether firms will start hiring more as it becomes less tenable to do more with less and you will see some extra pick-up in employment beyond what is justified in output, or whether we are just going to have to grow the economy harder to put people back to work is not certain,” he said.

“What I think is certain is that we walked back from the brink of depression and that there is a great deal under way that should result in increased job creation.”

Summers gave the interview before the release on Friday of data showing U.S. employers created jobs in March at the fastest rate in three years.

Obama said it was the best news on the jobs front in two years. About eight million Americans have lost their jobs since the start of the recession.

(Reporting by Peter Griffiths; Editing by Elizabeth Fullerton)

Whiteley loses grip on Braddon

The final tight contest in the Tasmanian election has seen Liberal frontbencher Brett Whiteley lose his seat in Braddon to the Greens’ Paul O’Halloran.

After waiting 11 agonising days since the election, he won a huge slice of Labor preferences and beat Brett Whiteley by almost 1,200 votes.

Mr O’Halloran is the first Greens member for Braddon since Di Hollister lost her seat in 1998 when electorates were cut to five members each.

He says the win shows the Greens have returned as a force in the north-west.

“It feels fantastic to be over the line,” he said.

“We’ve run a very strategic campaign, we’ve put out really positive announcements, particularly here in Braddon,” he said.

“Nick McKim has been up and down the highway like a yo-yo supporting us, we’ve had a really fantastic campaign team working on the ground so it really couldn’t have gone any better than it has.”

Mr Whiteley has been ousted after eight years in Parliament and seemingly on the brink of becoming Tasmania’s Health Minister.

He says he is pleased with his party’s election performance but disappointed he has lost the chance to serve in a Liberal minority Government.

He says the caretaker Premier David Bartlett should keep his word and hand power to the Liberals.

“I’m very disappointed in the end result but pleased in fact that the Liberal Party have polled so well thorughout the state,” he said.

“On the basis of that poll, David Bartlett today needs to live up to his word and recommend to the Governor that Will Hodgman be offered a commission to be the Premier of Tasmania.”

Fellow Liberal Adam Brooks strongly out-polled Mr Whiteley on election night after a big-spending campaign to claim the second Liberal seat.

Mr Whiteley says Mr Brooks will be a great addition.

“Adam Brooks will be a very good candidate. He’s a proven businessman, full of passion and enthusiasm and he will represent the people of Braddon very well,” he said.

Newcastle on brink of EPL return

Newcastle is on the verge of securing an immediate return to the English Premier League after a 2-0 win over promotion rivals Nottingham Forest.

Shola Ameobi returned from injury to fire Newcastle into the lead, midway through the second half, and Jose Enrique’s first goal for the club, in injury time, sealed a win that makes automatic promotion a virtual formality for the Magpies.

If Newcastle wins at Peterborough on Saturday, it will be promoted if third-placed Forest loses at Bristol City.

Ameobi, who came on for the injured Andy Carroll, was making his first appearance in seven weeks and he showed what Newcastle has been missing when he received Kevin Nolan’s pass with his back to goal with 19 minutes left.

The big striker turned and fired a low left-foot shot in off the far post to break the deadlock.

Newcastle had further chances to kill off the match but it was not until injury time that Enrique sealed the win.

- AFP

Bunting crashes out of Vancouver

Australian skier Bart Bunting has had a disappointing end to his comeback winter Paralympic Games, crashing out in the visually impaired men’s downhill.

Bunting ran into a gate in the first half of the lightning quick course at Whistler Creekside, causing him to lose his balance and fall over.

“[It got me] right in the nuts,” he said.

“We don’t even know at this point what happened. We’ll have to look at the video.”

He was not on his own on the injury list.

Japanese sit skier Kuniko Obinata had to be airlifted for treatment after violently careering off the course and flipping over, and Canadian standing skier Andrea Dziewior was stretchered off the course when she face planted, shortly after crossing the finish line.

Bunting did not compete in Turin in 2006 after winning two gold medals at Salt Lake City in 2002.

With his Vancouver campaign now finished, Bunting said he plans to compete in the next Paralympics, in Sochi, Russia in 2014.

“It’s on to Russia,” he said.

“If I got a gold today, I probably would have pulled out.”

Earlier, Melissa Perrine said she was not impressed with running fifth in the visually impaired women’s downhill.

“I am disappointed. I had a goal that I set out to achieve and I didn’t achieve it,” she said.

“I just wanted to podium. I wanted to be up there with the best.”

In the cross country events, Australia’s James Millar was 22nd in the standing men’s 10km, while Dominic Monypenny was also 22nd in the sitting men’s 10km.

Monypenny was more upbeat about his performance.

“Wicked. It was a superb course, very fast. It was a very competitive race,” he said.

“I wouldn’t be surprised if that’s the fastest time I’ve ever posted.

“Picking myself up after falling on the third lap … it was very steep. I was on the brink of not having the capability to do so.”

- AAP/ABC

Pak Army’s offensive in tribal areas pushing country towards ‘civil war’: Imran Khan

London, Mar.19 (ANI): Criticising the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) led government for launching military operations in country’s tribal regions, cricketer turned politician Imran Khan has warned that the Pakistani army”s offensive is pushing the country to the brink of “civil war”.

“It”s civil war in the making,” Imran told London”s Evening Standard newspaper.

He also blasted the joint operation of Pakistani and the US forces in tribal areas bordering Afghanistan, saying the offensive were actually turning more people against the government and America.

“They were like a bull in a china shop, fighting one or two guerrillas with aerial bombing of villages.That turned people against the army and a new phenomenon was created: the Pakistan Taliban,” The Dawn quoted Imran, as saying.

The Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) said instead of waging a war against its own people, the government should work for the development of the deprived strata of the society, which would help in preventing people from taking to militancy.

“You will have no problem with extremists in Pakistan if you have democracy with a welfare state,” Imran said. (ANI)

Syria agrees to receive Druze leader: Hezbollah

(Reuters) – Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad will meet Druze leader Walid Jumblatt in Damascus after he made conciliatory remarks about the Syrian leader, Hezbollah, which had been mediating between the two, said on Monday.

World

Jumblatt, once one of Syria’s harshest critics, said in a televised interview with al-Jazeera on Saturday that comments he made about Assad three years ago had been “inappropriate”.

The Syrian-backed Lebanese Shi’ite group Hezbollah said in a statement its leader Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah had informed Jumblatt that the Syrian leadership would “overlook what happened in the previous stage and would open a new page”.

“Assad will receive him in Damascus during a visit at a date which will be announced in the next few days.”

The statement, which described Jumblatt’s overture as a “bold revision”, said Nasrallah was acting as a mediator with the Syrian leadership based on a request by the Druze leader.

Jumblatt had once been a prominent figure in the U.S. and Saudi-backed “March 14″ alliance and was also one of the strongest critics of Syria’s ally, Hezbollah.

He later adopted a more conciliatory approach after the Shi’ite group and its pro-Syrian allies routed his followers in fighting in 2008 that brought Lebanon to the brink of civil war.

At a rally in 2007 marking the second anniversary of the assassination of former Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri, blamed by many Lebanese on Syria, Jumblatt described Assad as a “monkey, snake and a butcher”.

Jumblatt said on Saturday these remarks came at a moment of anger and expressed hope that a new page could be turned in his relations with Syria.

Lebanese-Syrian ties hit rock bottom after “March 14″, led by Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri, accused Syria of assassinating his father in February 2005. They also blamed Damascus for several later killings of Lebanese foes of Syrian influence.

Syria denies the allegations but Hariri’s killing sparked a worldwide outcry that forced an end to Damascus’ 29-year military presence in Lebanon. A special court set up in The Hague has yet to indict anyone for Hariri’s killing.

Rapprochement between Syria and Saudi Arabia last year has also eased tension and allowed Hariri, who won a parliamentary election in June, to form a unity government that included Hezbollah and other pro-Syrian allies.

(Writing by Yara Bayoumy; Editing by Jon Hemming)

Webb eyeing fifth Open title

A “kick in the pants” has spurred Karrie Webb to the brink of a fifth Women’s Australian Open in Melbourne.

Webb realised midway through her third round at Commonwealth Golf Club that she was starting to feel sorry for herself after a tiring few weeks.

But she snapped out of her lull in time to continue a flawless round, and record a 3-under par 70 and propel herself to the outright lead.

Last week Webb fired a blistering final-round 61 to grab the Ladies Masters and a win on Sunday would give her a third Masters-Open double.

She is 6-under-par overall, one shot ahead of overnight leader Giulia Sergas of Italy, who slipped to a 2-over par 75.

Defending champion Laura Davies had a topsy-turvy round which included everything from a dunked ball to a holed bunker shot, but emerged from the confusion in outright third place at 4-under.

Webb, though, is confident of a strong finish as she continues to showcase a polished game.

“I felt like I played really solidly today,” Webb said.

“I swung really well, I hit a couple of loose iron shots the last couple of holes but tee-to-green was really solid and three birdies and no bogeys around here is a pretty good effort.”

The key, she said was conservative course management.

“Today there were a few pins you just shouldn’t try to get to,” she said.

“You just took your medicine and hit it 30 feet away and two-putted.

“It’s a bit more of a thinker’s course than last week – last week you could just pretty well shoot at the pins but this week you’ve really got to have a game plan and stick to it.”

Webb is not used to playing for such a long stretch and had to remind herself to stay alert on Saturday.

“It is the first time in many years I’ve played four (tournaments) in a row but I feel like I’ve got a good one left in me and we’ll just see if that’s good enough tomorrow.

“I’ve been tired all week and I had a bit of a lull there through the middle – not that I was getting myself into any trouble, but on 14 I hit a poor iron shot and a poor bunker shot.

“I gave myself a kick in the pants and told myself to stop feeling sorry for myself because I am a little bit tired.”

Davies unravelled but managed to stay well in the hunt and is praying for some consistency on Sunday.

“I haven’t played particularly well the last two rounds but I’ve got the ball around,” Davies said.

“The first round I thought the golf course was pretty easy – 5-under, no dramas. But the last two days – lots of drama.

“But this is the sort of week I love to have. Normally I tend to play a bit better and score worse and that is frustrating.

“I’m not saying I’m brilliant, I’m saying that normally I’m in the shit.”

Queenslander Katherine Hull (72) will go into the final round three shots off the pace.

-AAP

An Oscar and a Razzie? Bullock set for bizarre double

LONDON: Sandra Bullock is on the brink of a rare double this weekend which could see her become the first actress to win an Oscar and a slightly less-coveted Razzie award in the space of 24 hours.

The star is regarded as the favorite to win the best actress prize at Sunday’s Oscars for her performance in ‘The Blind Side’, a role which has already won Bullock a Golden Globe and Screen Actors Guild awards.

However, the popular leading lady is also expected to see one of her less successful roles honored at Saturday’s Golden Raspberry Awards, the irreverent Oscars parody intended as an annual salute to Hollywood’s worst of the worst.

Bullock is up for a Razzie for her performance in ‘All About Steve’, which suffered a critical savaging on its release last year. Unlike most celebrity Razzie winners Bullock has vowed to attend on Saturday if she wins.

Capello to remain England team’s boss until 2012

London, Sep 5 (ANI): Fabio Capello will be England football team’s manager even after next year’s World Cup finals.

There are fears that he will quit as boss if England fails to reach the quarterfinals. But the Italian has a 6 million pound-a-year deal with the Football Association until 2012.

“The target is to respect my full contract. It ends in 2012 and I want to respect it.

It is not only a matter for me but also for the FA,” The Sun quoted Capello, as saying.

Capello has led England to the brink of World Cup qualification with seven straight wins.

But after last month’s 2-2 friendly draw in Holland, the Three Lions chief has warned that there can be no more slip-ups against Slovenia today.

“We have defended very well in all of the competitive games but in the friendly matches we have been so-so. We have made mistakes and I have discussed this matter with the team,” he said.

Skipper John Terry revealed: “The manager is very strong-minded and if he sees a mistake he will sit there for 30 or 40 minutes in the team meeting until the message is clear.” (ANI)

Now, Jordan says Andre’s gone ‘Insania’

London, August 26 (ANI): Jordan has said that she thinks her estranged husband Peter Andre maybe on the verge of a nervous breakdown.

The glamour girl, a.k.a. Katie Price, who has been locked in a bitter battle of words with the singer since they split in May this year, alleged that Andre is “not in the right state of mind”.

The 31-year-old, on her controversial new TV documentary ‘What Katie Did Next’, said she feared the ‘Mysterious Girl’ hitmaker has gone Insania – the title of his 2004 hit.

“I watched Pete’s show and thought he didn’t seem in the right state of mind to film,” the Daily Star quoted Katie, whose latest column appears in this week’s OK! magazine, as saying.

“He shouldn’t have been out there doing that stuff, he wasn’t ready,” she added.

Meanwhile, friends of Andre said her “snide” remarks may take a nasty toll on the star.

One said: “Everybody knows he’s hurting, he doesn’t need Kate telling the world he is an emotional cripple.

“He is not on the brink of a breakdown. He’s just not as hard-nosed as Kate. Then again, not many people are!” (ANI)