Abdul Qayum Tutakhail Explained

Abdul Qayum Tutakhail عبدالقیوم طوطاخیل
Birth Date:28 March 1940
Birth Place:Paktia, Afghanistan
Branch: Afghan National Army
Serviceyears:1967–2014
Rank: Major General
Unit:Army Medical Corps
Commands:Surgeon General
Battles:Siege of Urgun
Battles of Zhawar

Major General عبدالقیوم طوطاخیل (Abdul Qayum Tutakhail or Totakhil) was born in Sayed-Karam district of Paktia province Afghanistan. He was Assistant Minister of Defense for Health Affairs in Afghanistan. Prior to this General Tutakhail served as Surgeon General[1] of the Afghan National Army and as a faculty lecturer of AFAMS teaching Combat Surgery, Tactics, Organization and Medical Ethics. Since the 1970s General Tutakhail has served in the Afghan Military in different capacities[2] having a distinguished career. He is an ethnic Pashtun from the southern Paktia province.

__TOC__

Early life and career

Abdul Qayum Tutakhail son of Khan Mohammad Tutakhail was born in the Paktia province of Afghanistan in 1940. He attended Cadet College and after graduating he joined the Kabul Medical University receiving his MD degree. He completed further studies in the former Soviet Union at the Institute of Neurosurgery in Kiev receiving PhD degree. He specialized in neurosurgery / neurotraumatology with over 3,000 operations under his belt having introduced pioneering medical techniques.

Tutakhail was the author of many research papers such as combat trauma treatment methods, safeguard methods, supply and distribution of medical equipment, principles of injury treatment and trauma during combat.

Tutakhail's Postings

Military Medical Trainer of Personnel and Cadre Afghan Ministry of Defense (1967–1971)
Chief of Surgery and Traumatology Department Military Hospital Number 1/2 (1971–1976)
Chief of Neurosurgery Department AFAMS (1980–1981)
Head Surgeon AFAMS (1981–1982)
Head Surgeon of the Army Afghan Ministry of Defense (1982–1986)
Surgeon General Afghan Ministry of Defense (1986–1993)
Lecturer at AFAMS AFAMS (2005–2010)
General Staff Surgeon General[3] Afghan Ministry of Defense (2010–2012)
Assistant Minister of Defence—Health Affairs Afghan Ministry of Defense (2012–2014)

By mid-December 2010 when the former Surgeon General Ahmad Zia Yaftali was fired amid accusations of corruption,[4] theft of medicine worth 42 million US dollars destined to Afghan National Security Forces[5] and deadly neglect of injured soldiers and policeman admitted in the Sardar Mohammad Dawood Khan hospital,[6] General Abdul Qayum Tutakhail was reassigned to his previous post to help manage the situation. Since then the hospital has witnessed major improvements and there have not been any documented cases of neglect since February 2011.[6]

Notes and References

  1. News: جنرال احمد ضیا یفتلي په ځان لګیدلي تورونه رد کړل. ازادي رادیو. 25 December 2010 . 2 April 2015. 2 April 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150402113617/http://pa.azadiradio.org/content/article/2258765.html. live . راډيو . ازادي .
  2. http://www.ntm-a.com/news/pashto/2101-2011-02-19-04-56-10?lang=
  3. Web site: Archived copy . 2011-03-28 . 2022-02-26 . https://web.archive.org/web/20220226003501/http://www6.ntm-a.com/?template=simple2c&tdfs=1&s_token=1645835699.0106390000&uuid=1645835699.0106390000&term=Military%20Contractor%20Jobs&term=Military%20News%20Media%20Monitoring%20Tools&term=Military%20Surplus%20Catalog&searchbox=0&showDomain=0&backfill=0 . live .
  4. Web site: Millions of Dollars Worth Medicines Disappeared . 2011-09-10 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20120325144848/http://tolonews.com/en/afghanistan/1404-millions-of-dollars-worth-medicines-disappeared . 2012-03-25 .
  5. News: Afghan hospital chief sacked following suicide attacks. BBC News. 29 December 2010. 2 April 2015. 1 January 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20110101072409/http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-south-asia-12083818. live.
  6. Web site: Neglect at Afghan Military Hospital – WSJ. Maria Abi-Habib. 3 September 2011. WSJ. 2 April 2015. 8 February 2015. https://web.archive.org/web/20150208120501/https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424053111904480904576496703389391710. live.