The Kremlin has reportedly told Russian officials to throw away their iPhones by the end of the month

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The Kremlin has reportedly told Russian officials to throw away their iPhones by the end of the month
Sergei Kiriyenko, first deputy head of the presidential administration, told Russian, officials to ditch iPhones, Russian newspaper Kommersant reported.Valentina Petrova / Associated Press
  • Some Russian officials were advised to ditch their iPhones, Russian newspaper Kommersant reported.
  • Officials close to the presidential administration were reportedly told to get new phones by April.
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Some Russian officials were advised by the Kremlin to ditch their Apple iPhones by the end of March over information-security concerns, the Russian business publication Kommersant first reported.

The directive took place during a seminar in the Moscow region earlier this month, according to the Russian newspaper, which cited sources present at the meeting.

Officials were told to replace their iPhones with phones built on other smartphone software, such as Android, Chinese counterparts, or Aurora, an operating system developed by the Russian company Open Mobile Platform, the publication reported.

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"It's all over for the iPhone: either throw it away or give it to the children," one person who attended the seminar told Kommersant, according to a Reuters translation of the quote.

Sergei Kiriyenko, first deputy head of Russia's presidential administration, reportedly told the officials they had to replace their iPhones by April 1.

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The reported instruction comes amid undergoing campaign preparations for the upcoming 2024 Russian presidential election. Apple had previously banned imports to Russia, shortly after the country invaded Ukraine last year.

Last year, Apple stopped product sales to Russia a week after the country invaded Ukraine. But a few months later, reports surfaced that people in Russia were still purchasing the new iPhone 14 through legalized parallel imports programs. A few months after the war began, Russia had reportedly legalized these import programs — systems that allowed sellers to ship products into the country without the trademark owner's permission.

Apple did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Although those within the Russian presidential administration were reportedly told to get rid of their Apple iPhones, it's unclear whether all Russian government officials were advised to do so.

The Embassy of the Russian Federation in the US did not immediately respond to a request for comment ahead of publication. However, Kremlin press secretary Dmitry Peskov told reporters that "smartphones should not be used for official business," Reuters reported.

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"Any smartphone has a fairly transparent mechanism, no matter what operating system it has – Android or iOS," he said, according to Reuters. "Naturally, they are not used for official purposes."

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