Singer Sinead O’Connor has dismissed reports suggesting she was missing and had threatened to jump off a bridge.

The troubled Irish singer posted an update on her official Facebook page calling the report “false and malicious gossip”.

She also stated that the UK’s European Union referendum result meant “Ireland is officially no longer owned by Britain”.

Sinead O'Connor
Sinead O’Connor (Balazs Mohai/AP)

A spokesman for the Chicago Police Department said the force was alerted at 3.30pm local time that the whereabouts of the 49-year-old Irish singer were unknown.

Officers received a report from police in Ireland that O’Connor had said she planned to jump off a bridge in the US city, the spokesman said.

In her Facebook update, the Nothing Compares 2 U singer said she was “far too f****** happy” to jump off a bridge.

Sinead O'Connor on stage
Sinead O’Connor on stage (Jean-Christophe Bott/AP)

She accused “some stupid bitch up at Swords Garda station” of spreading the suicide threat report.

Sinead congratulated “every man, woman and child who ever died for the cause of Irish freedom” in her post.

The 49-year-old also had an “our day has come” message to “all those, including myself, who have been persecuted mercilessly by the Irish so-called free-state for having declared support for Sinn Fein and the Republican movement”.

The message concluded: “Ireland 4 England 0″.

Sinead O'Connor
Sinead O’Connor (Antonio Calanni/AP)

Sinead’s history of mental health problems sparked a police search in May when she failed to return from a bike ride in the Chicago suburb of Wilmette.

In December, she wrote on Facebook that she had been detained in hospital for a mental health evaluation.

A month earlier she wrote another Facebook post claiming she had overdosed on pills in a hotel room in Ireland.

She was later found safe and taken to hospital.