-
England coach Tuchel set to sign new deal until 2028 - report
-
Death toll in Madagascar cyclone rises to 35
-
Shanaka fireworks as Sri Lanka thrash Oman at T20 World Cup
-
Sanofi says board has removed CEO Paul Hudson
-
Struggling Nissan forecasts $4.2 bn full-year net loss
-
Venezuela to debate historic amnesty bill for political prisoners
-
Ukraine skeleton racer Heraskevych disqualified from Olympics over memorial helmet
-
Markets mostly rise as stong US jobs data ease economy worries
-
France jails three in gang rape case after mother saves evidence
-
From 'Derry Girls' to 'heaven', Irish writer airs new comedy
-
Asia markets mixed as stong US jobs data temper rate expectations
-
Shanaka fireworks as Sri Lanka pile up 225-5 against Oman
-
Samsung starts mass production of next-gen AI memory chip
-
Benin's lovers less row-mantic as apps replace waterway rendezvous
-
Geneva opera house selling off thousands of extravagant costumes
-
Non-alcoholic wine: a booming business searching for quality
-
Greece's Cycladic islands swept up in concrete fever
-
Grieving Canada town holds vigil for school shooting victims
-
Israel president says at end of visit antisemitism in Australia 'frightening'
-
Cunningham on target as depleted Pistons down Raptors
-
Canada probes mass shooter's past interactions with police, health system
-
Dutch speed skater Jutta Leerdam combines Olympic gold and influencer attitude
-
Scotland coach Townsend under pressure as England await
-
Canadian ice dancers put 'dark times' behind with Olympic medal
-
'Exhausting' off-field issues hang over Wales before France clash
-
Crusaders target another title as Super Rugby aims to speed up
-
Chinese Olympic snowboarder avoids serious injury after nasty crash
-
China carbon emissions 'flat or falling' in 2025: analysis
-
'China shock': Germany struggles as key market turns business rival
-
French ice dancer Cizeron's 'quest for perfection' reaps second Olympic gold
-
Most Asia markets rise as traders welcome US jobs
-
EU leaders push to rescue European economy challenged by China, US
-
Plenty of peaks, but skiing yet to take off in Central Asia
-
UN aid relief a potential opening for Trump-Kim talks, say analysts
-
Berlin Film Festival to open with a rallying cry 'to defend artistic freedom'
-
Taiwan leader wants greater defence cooperation with Europe: AFP interview
-
Taiwan leader warns countries in region 'next' in case of China attack: AFP interview
-
World Cup ticket prices skyrocket on FIFA re-sale site
-
'No one to back us': Arab bus drivers in Israel grapple with racist attacks
-
Venezuelan AG wants amnesty for toppled leader Maduro
-
Scrutiny over US claim that Mexican drone invasion prompted airport closure
-
Trump to undo legal basis for US climate rules
-
Protesters, police clash at protest over Milei labor reform
-
Dyche sacked by Forest after dismal Wolves draw
-
France seeks probe after diplomat cited in Epstein files
-
Rivers among 2026 finalists for Basketball Hall of Fame
-
Israel president says antisemitism in Australia 'frightening'
-
Razavi Law Group "Who Hurt You?" Is Now Asking: "Who Fired You?"
-
Formation Metals Drills 1.75 g/t Au over 30.4 Metres Including 3.51 g/t Au over 10.5 Metres at the Advanced N2 Gold Project
-
Taiwan Depository & Clearing Corporation (TDCC) Partners with Proxymity to Provide Cross-Border Straight Through Processing (STP) Voting Services
Sinead O'Connor, a troubled Irish icon
Sinead O'Connor will forever be remembered as the Irish singer who made Prince's "Nothing Compares 2 U" her own, turning it into an anthem for the broken-hearted.
With a simple video shot in winter at a deserted park on the outskirts of Paris, she delivered a song of real and raw emotion encapsulating perfectly love and loss.
Staring at the camera, her mesmerising elfin features accentuated by a distinctive shaven head, her real tears powerfully embodied a life and soul stripped bare.
In public and in private, it was a characteristic of her celebrated, eclectic and often controversial career and life.
From the 1980s, she released 10 solo albums, from the multi-platinum "I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got" to 2014's "I'm not Bossy, I'm the Boss", drawing on everything from traditional Irish music to blues and reggae.
Born in 1966 in County Dublin, Sinead Marie Bernadette O'Connor was the third of five children born to parents who went through a bitter divorce.
She described herself as a child "kleptomaniac" in 2013, a way of dealing with abuse she called "Sexual and physical. Psychological. Spiritual. Emotional. Verbal" in a 1992 interview.
She was arrested several times before being sent to a church-run correctional facility where a sympathetic nun encouraged her to pursue music, buying her a guitar.
O'Connor began busking on the streets of Dublin and singing in pubs, where a need to be heard above the din helped her to develop her commanding voice.
She moved to London and produced her first album aged 20 while heavily pregnant. A request from her record company to soften her image backfired and cemented her punk style.
"They took me out to lunch and said they'd like me to start wearing short skirts and boots, grow my hair long and do the whole girl thing. What they were describing was actually their mistresses," she told the Daily Telegraph.
A trip to a Greek barber followed and O'Connor asked him to shave her head.
"He didn't want to do it, he was almost crying," she recalled. "I was delighted with it."
Her 1987 debut "The Lion and the Cobra" became a cult sensation, followed three years later by "I Do Not Want What I Haven't Got" which contained her breakthrough hit.
"I suppose I've got to say that music saved me," she said in 2013. "It was either jail or music. I got lucky."
She began playing to sold-out gigs -- her striking appearance and unmistakable voice making her a star around the world.
- Controversy -
O'Connor quickly developed a name for inflammatory outbursts and caused an international controversy in a 1992 performance on US television show Saturday Night Live.
While dressed in a white lace dress and performing Bob Marley's "War", O'Connor sang the words "child abuse" before tearing up a picture of Pope John Paul II and declaring "Fight the real enemy!"
The abuse of children by Catholic priests in Ireland was not yet widely known and O'Connor's gesture sparked widespread criticism.
A steamroller crushed a pile of her CDs and tapes in front of her recording company's office in New York, and the incident dealt a blow to her popularity. Following albums failed to reach the commercial success of her previous work.
In the mid-1990s O'Connor's personal life began to draw more attention than her music, including a bitter custody battle over her young daughter with a former partner.
In 1999 she was again the centre of an uproar when she was ordained a priest by a dissident bishop in a ceremony not recognised by the mainstream Catholic Church, which does not accept women priests.
A year later O'Connor signed a new deal with Atlantic Records and released a series of new albums, including the traditional Irish-inspired "Sean-Nos Nua" and reggae album "Throw Down Your Arms".
An announced retirement from music in 2003 did not last long.
- Unfiltered -
O'Connor was married four times and had four children, the eldest born in 1987 and the youngest in 2006.
She gained a reputation for colourful public statements, writing a column in the Irish Independent in 2011 explaining that her love life was so bad that "inanimate objects are starting to look good" and soliciting applications from potential partners.
"Must not be named Brian or Nigel," she specified.
Her 2014 album "I'm Not Bossy, I'm the Boss" was well received but she was forced to cancel touring in mid-2015, citing exhaustion.
Her posts on social media became increasingly unfiltered, often threatening legal action against former associates, referring to physical and mental health difficulties and discussing troubles with her family and children.
In November 2015 she announced on Facebook that she had "taken an overdose" while booked anonymously into a hotel, but was found safe by police.
And in June 2016, Chicago police received a tip she might have been threatening to jump off a bridge, but she dismissed the rumours as "false and malicious gossip".
The musician converted to Islam and changed her name to Shuhada' Sadaqat in 2018.
Towards the end of her life she had reportedly been dividing her time between Ireland and Britain and in 2022 her son Shane died from suicide aged 17.
A.Mahlangu--AMWN