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Kremlin appoints Chubais nanotechnology corporation chief-2

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Russia's president appointed Anatoly Chubais, former head of the now nonexistent electricity monopoly, as head of the State Nanotechnology Corporation, the Kremlin said Monday.
(Adds Chubais quotes in paragraphs 5-6)

MOSCOW, September 22 (RIA Novosti) - Russia's president appointed Anatoly Chubais, former head of the now nonexistent electricity monopoly, as head of the State Nanotechnology Corporation, the Kremlin said Monday.

The press service said Dmitry Medvedev had signed an order dismissing Leonid Melamed, who was once Chubais's first deputy at Unified Energy Systems (UES), and giving the job to the former deputy prime minister.

Chubais, 53, had been widely expected to head the corporation - set up to promote nanotechnology research as part of the Kremlin's efforts to reduce the country's dependence on energy resources - since the breakup of UES, which he led for 10 years.

UES was broken up in July into a web of power generators as part of a large-scale reform to attract foreign investment to the decaying industry.

In his first statement in his new post, Chubais said Russian nanotechnology sales should reach 1 trillion rubles ($40 billion at the current rate of exchange) by 2015.

"Both the corporation's mission and its main goal - securing leading positions on the world nanotechnology market -- are understandable and important for me. By 2015, the sales of Russian nanotechnology products should be equal to the turnover of the UES affiliated energy companies - 1 trillion rubles a year," he said.

Chubais is a member of the corporation's supervisory board and of a government commission on high technology and innovation.

He is not, however, a popular figure in Russia, blamed first as a leading architect of the country's transition to capitalism that allowed a handful of oligarchs to earn fortunes in privatization deals in the 1990s, when millions were left in poverty amid persisting economic crisis, and latterly for raising electricity charges as UES sought to pass costs on to previously protected domestic consumers.

Chubais, an advocate of the free market, has been critical recently of the Russian government for increasing its role in the economy.

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