Singer Sinead O’Connor spoke openly about how being a survivor of one of the many workhouses for "fallen women" affected her throughout her life.

The ‘Nothing Compares 2U’ hit-maker, who now goes by the name Magda Davitt, spoke openly about her time in the Catholic Church's Magdalene Laundries during a 1993 interview.

Her interview was published just 24 hours after the release of a damning report on the Laundries, which has highlighted state collusion with the Nuns who ran them.

O’Connor (51) told the Irish Sun how she was just 14-years-old when she was sent to the Sisters of Our Lady of Charity laundry, in Dublin, after she was labeled a "problem child." This particular Magdalene Laundry only shut its doors in 1996.

Read more: We owe Sinead O’Connor an apology - she spoke the truth about church child abuse

She told the paper: “We were girls in there, not women, just children really. And the girls in there cried every day.

“It was a prison. We didn’t see our families, we were locked in, cut off from life, deprived of a normal childhood.

“We were told we were there because we were bad people. Some of the girls had been raped at home and not believed.

“One girl was in because she had a bad hip and her family didn’t know what to do with her. It was a great grief to us.”

The rock star explained how her 18 months in High Park in the Drumcondra suburb of Dublin left her so angry at the injustice that it was part of the reason she caused worldwide controversy by tearing up a picture of the Pope on live television.

She added: “It wasn’t the only reason, but it was one of them.”

Lashing out at the Church’s ‘flaccid’ apology, O’Connor said she was ‘disgusted’ by it.

The mother-of-four said: “They said something like, ‘We’re sorry for the hurt.’

“The word hurt doesn’t cover it. I am disgusted that the State won’t apologize. I’m disgusted at the tone of the Church’s flaccid apology. The Church is getting away with it again.”

Sinead, who has previously claimed she suffered abuse as a child, was sent to the Sisters of Our Lady of Charity Institute after she began stealing as a teenager.

Read more: 2,000 Irish children were illegally adopted in US from Magdalene Laundries

She said: “My worried dad thought he was doing the right thing by sending me to be rehabilitated. He told me he even paid for the privilege of doing so.

“He thought he was doing the right thing. He was convinced into it. He paid them to take me. I never told him the truth of how bad it was.

“There was no rehabilitation there and no therapy. Nothing but people telling us we were terrible people. I stopped the stealing all right. I didn’t want to be sent back there. But at what cost?

“I wouldn’t class myself as being abused while I was there. I came in at the tail end of it.

“But certainly some of the punishments were a little f***ing odd.

“As a punishment, I would be sent up to bed early to go to sleep with the dying old Magdalene ladies. There would be about six of them in the room and me and I was terrified. These women were old and dying and I was scared up there.

“The laundries were gone then, but I did see them in a big room, about 200 square feet full of laundries. And I saw the older women, shuffling along. We were not allowed to talk to them.”

O'Connor has long been outspoken about the Catholic Church. In 1992 while appearing on Saturday Night Live, she famously ripped up a photograph of Pope John Paul II saying "we have confidence in good over evil. Fight the real enemy!"

* Originally published in 2013.