The Bangladesh Hospital began in a cowshed of Shimantopur, a bordering area of Bangladesh, started by Captain Akhtar Ahmed on 29 March 1971. The first patient was a villager who had been shot in the leg. Akhtar chose Naik Shamsu Miah from the
East Pakistan Rifles as his assistant. Later on 9 May 1971, after the 4th East Bengal Regiment had to retreat due to a shortage of ammunition, Ahmed moved his hospital to a forest rest house of
Sonamura of
Tripura in India. During those days nurse Subedar Mannan joined Ahmed. The centre suffered from shortages of equipment and facilities. And Ahmed who was the Company Commander of 4th East Bengal Regiment during the war was thinking of again shifting the hospital. Shortly after the battle of Shalda River on 1 June, Major
Khaled Mosharraf directed Ahmed to establish a hospital with more facilities. Ahmed moved his medical centre to Matinagar, adjacent to the Sector-2 headquarters of
Agartala. They set up a tent in Daroga Bagicha, away from the Melaghar headquarters. Ahmed was accompanied by Captain Dr. Sitara Begum, Saeeda Kamal,
Sultana Kamal, Shamsuddin a final year medical student, Dalia Ahmed, Linu Billah, Habibul Alam; and his two sisters Asma and Reshma. At the end of June Dr.
Zafrullah Chowdhury and Dr. M A Mobin, two
Bengali physicians who were studying in London, met Ahmed in
Sonamura and asked about his needs. Ahmed asked them to collect essential medical equipment. Later, the
Provisional Government of Bangladesh granted BDT thirty thousand rupiah for the hospital and Ahmed set up a 200-bed complex in Bishramganj in
Tripura. The hospital complex started operation on 26 August 1971. Dr. Mobin, who was studying for
FRCS degree, modernized the operation theatre of the hospital. The hospital was transformed into a 400-bed one by the end of the war in December. Sitara Begum served as the Commanding Officer of the Bangladesh Hospital. == Doctors ==