Advertisement
Russia tears down Steve Jobs memorial after Apple CEO Tim Cook comes out as gay
2-MIN READ2-MIN

A memorial in Russia to the late Apple founder Steve Jobs has been removed after his successor Tim Cook confirmed that he is gay.
Cook discussed his sexuality in an essay for Bloomberg Businessweek last week, in which he said being gay was “among the greatest gifts God has given me.” Prior to his public coming out, Cook had topped gay magazine Out’s Power 50 ranking for three years straight, and spoke publicly of overcoming discrimination.
The tech billionaire, who succeeded Jobs as Apple CEO in 2011, was congratulated widely on his coming out by both tech and political figures in the US and other Western countries.
Advertisement
One place where Cook’s sexuality has not been so warmly embraced is Russia, which was criticised by LGBT and human rights groups last year when it passed a law banning the spread of so-called “gay propaganda” to children.
Advertisement
Russian lawmaker Vitaly Milonov, principle sponsor of the anti-gay bill, called for Cook to be banned from entering the country.
“What could he bring us? The Ebola virus, Aids, gonorrhea? They all have unseemly ties over there,” Milonov told the FlashNord website on Thursday. “Ban him for life.”
Advertisement
Select Voice
Select Speed
1.00x