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Stricken Apple boss Steve Jobs was at the centre of a new mystery today over a White House decision not to release a photograph of him with President Obama at a high-tech summit in California.
Pancreatic cancer survivor Mr Jobs attended the closed-door Silicon Valley meeting with Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, Google Chief Executive Eric Schmidt and a number of other technology titans.
But while a photo of Mr Zuckerberg with the president was issued by the White House, no pictures of Jobs materialised, fuelling renewed speculation that the 55-year-old Apple figurehead’s health may be failing much faster than previously admitted.
A White House source told MailOnline that the picture of Mr Zuckerberg with the President was the only one due to be released from the meeting.
The event took place just hours after the National Enquirer published shocking new pictures of Mr Jobs looking painfully frail and weak, with his jeans and dark top hanging loosely on his 6ft 2in rail-thin body.
Last night's summit, which lasted more than two hours, was a clear opportunity for the president to be photographed with the leaders of his push to 'out-educate and out-innovate' the rest of the world.
But the lack of a high-profile photocall will fuel suspicions that White House staff wanted to respect the privacy of ill Mr Jobs.