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Sinéad O'Connor performing in 2020. Alamy Stock Photo

Sinéad O'Connor died of natural causes, coroner confirms

Sinead O’Connor was found dead at her UK apartment in July of last year.

THE LONDON CORONER’S office has confirmed that Irish singer Sinéad O’Connor died of natural causes. 

One of the best known talents to have ever come from Ireland, Sinéad died at the age of 56 in July of last year. 

She was found unresponsive at the flat she had recently moved into in Herne Hill, South East London. 

The Coroners Clerk released a statement today confirming that “Ms O’Connor died of natural causes”. 

“The Coroner has therefore ceased their involvement in her death,” they added. 

Her teenage son Shane had passed away 18 months earlier, and she had shared her heartbreak and grief over his death with fans on social media. 

The ‘Nothing Compares to You’ singer had been working on new music before her death. 

Sinéad also went by the names Magda Davitt and Shuhada Sadaqat after she converted to Islam. She had four children. 

Tributes were widely paid in Sinéad’s honour following her passing, and thousands turned out to mourn her on the day of her funeral in Bray in August.

Michael D. Higgins, the President of Ireland, attended her funeral and said of her life and work: “The outpouring of grief and appreciation of the life and work of Sinéad O’Connor demonstrates the profound impact which she had on the Irish people.

“The unique contribution of Sinéad involved the experience of a great vulnerability combined with a superb, exceptional level of creativity that she chose to deliver through her voice, her music and her songs. 

“The expression of both, without making any attempt to reduce the one for the sake of the other, made her contribution unique – phenomenal in music terms, but of immense heroism. 

“However, achieving this came from the one heart and the one body and the one life, which extracted an incredible pain, perhaps one too much to bear.

“That is why all those who are seeking to make a fist of their life, combining its different dimensions in their own way, can feel so free to express their grief at her loss.”

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    Mute Aidan Leonard
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    Sep 7th 2021, 7:29 AM

    You forgot to mention the amount if technology around today that was directly inspired by Sci fi too…..

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    Mute SPQH
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    Sep 7th 2021, 10:10 AM

    @Aidan Leonard: a lot of the look of modern technology is inspired by sci-fi and how it shows how cool something could be, but a lot of the nuts and bolts come from just a need to get something done in a certain way or for efficiency. The first mainframes were mainly military linked and the development of the nuclear bomb and the organisation of large scale logistics and navigation of missiles and seas had a lot to do with it (see Grace Hopper) also educational, like the Plato project, they basically invented flat touchscreens and interconnected networks (independent of arpanet) in the 60s because they needed to but they weren’t thinking of the likes of star trek at all.

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    Mute Jj
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    Sep 7th 2021, 9:20 AM

    We can make video calls to people around the world and travel to the other side of the planet in 24h, which we couldn’t do at the turn of the 20th century. No doubt big advancements will be made in the next 100 years, although with flight there was about 400 years in the difference between conception and realisation.

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    Mute john smith iv
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    Sep 7th 2021, 12:53 PM

    @Jj: flight has slowed down in technological advances. Compare 1900-1940, 1940-1980 and 1980-2020. Maybe it will start up again but I feel that the billionaires might be engaging in pet projects. Definitely Bezos. Musk has something worthwhile going on.

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    Mute Sean May
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    Sep 7th 2021, 10:49 AM

    An interesting and enjoyable read, Mr Fennel. As a life-long fan of Science-Fiction myself, I can certainly relate.

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