Ukrainian official urges Apple CEO Tim Cook to cut off business with Russia


    The vice prime minister of Ukraine said on Twitter Friday that he has asked Apple Inc. Chief Executive Tim Cook to stop doing business with Russia and its citizens, including by cutting off that country’s access to the App Store.

    Mykhailo Fedorov, whose Twitter bio says he is also Ukraine’s minister of digital transformation, tweeted from a verified account that he has sent a letter imploring Cook to support Ukraine as it has been attacked by Russia, saying “in 2022, modern technology is perhaps the best answer to the tanks, multiple rocket launchers and missiles.”

    In the letter, which Fedorov attached to his tweet, he asked the CEO to “stop supplying Apple services and products to the Russian Federation, including blocking access to App Store!”

    Apple
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    has not returned a request for comment about Fedorov’s request Friday.

    Fedorov’s office has not returned a request for comment. As of 6:20 p.m. Eastern on Friday, his tweets do not refer to any other requests he made of U.S. companies.

    Cook tweeted Thursday that he is “deeply concerned with the situation in Ukraine. We’re doing all we can for our teams there and will be supporting local humanitarian efforts.”

    The Ukraine vice prime minister’s request comes as the U.S. announced sanctions against Russia over its invasion of Ukraine this week. President Joe Biden’s administration said Thursday those sanctions include cutting off “more than half of Russia’s high-tech imports,” such as semiconductors, telecommunications, encryption security, navigation technology and more. Fedorov’s tweet urged Cook to “support the package of U.S. government sanctions!”

    Friday, the Biden administration said it would sanction Russian President Vladimir Putin, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and members of the Russian national security team directly.

    According to the most recent data from Statista, Apple’s Russian subsidiary had sales worth 260 billion rubles in 2020, which is the equivalent of $3.1 billion.





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