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Move to name Paris street after Steve Jobs has leftists up in arms

A man wearing a mask depicting Apple's co-founder Steve Jobs poses for a photograph with an apple as he waits for the release of Apple's new iPhone 6 and 6 Plus, in front of the Apple Store at Tokyo's Omotesando shopping district September 19, 2014. REUTERS/Yuya Shino/Files (Reuters)

By Geert De Clercq PARIS (Reuters) - A proposal to name a street after the late Apple Inc chief executive and co-founder Steve Jobs has divided the leftist city council of a Paris district. The local district mayor wants to call one of several new streets around the vast Halle Freyssinet high-tech startup hub the "Rue Steve Jobs" in honour of the U.S. inventor of the iPhone who died in 2011. But Green and Communist local councillors in Paris's 13th district don't like the idea because of Apple's social and fiscal practices. "Steve Jobs was chosen because of his impact on the development of personal computing and because he was a real entrepreneur," said a spokeswoman for mayor Jerome Coumet, defending the proposal. She said other streets would be named after British computer scientist and code-breaker Alan Turing, UK mathematician and computer pioneer Ada Lovelace, US naval officer and computer programming pioneer Grace Murray Hopper and French civil engineer Eugene Freyssinet, who invented pre-stressed concrete. Leftist councillors are not impressed however by Jobs' reputation and heritage. They criticised working conditions at Apple's Chinese subcontractors as well as the iPhone maker's alleged tax avoidance methods in Ireland, which have come under fire from the European Commission. "The choice of Steve Jobs is misplaced in light of the heritage he has left behind," communist local councillors said in a statement. The Paris city council, in which leftist parties have a majority, will take a vote on the issue sometime next week. "Steve Jobs is not a perfect man, but he has changed our daily lives by popularising computers, the mouse and the smartphone," Coumet said on his Twitter feed. Halle Freyssinet, a former freight railway station designed in 1929, will become one of Europe's biggest start-up hubs and will house some 1,000 start-ups when it opens early next year. (Reporting by Geert De Clercq; Editing by Richard Balmforth and Ralph Boulton)