Dietmar Enderlein

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Dietmar Enderlein (born March 22, 1943 in Plauen , Vogtland ) is a German doctor and entrepreneur . He was a colonel in the National People's Army .

Life

Enderlein grew up in Plauen and trained as a carpenter in addition to school . After graduating from high school, he went to the NVA. From 1963 he studied medicine at the Military Medical Section at the University of Greifswald . In the meantime, he spent a year at the SM Kirov Military Medical Academy in Leningrad . In 1969 the Promotion A . As a specialist in social medicine , he was appointed institute director of the Military Medical Section in Greifswald in 1974 at the age of 31. After obtaining his PhD B (1984) he became a lecturer in 1985 and professor in 1986 . Appointed commander of the section in 1988 , he was one of the three highest-ranking medical officers in the German Democratic Republic . He was a member of the Socialist Unity Party of Germany and was appointed Obermedizinalrat (GDR) . In March 1985 he committed himself to cooperation with the Ministry for State Security and was listed as IM Rolf Jakob .

On March 15, 1990, he and three colleagues founded Medigreif GmbH in Greifswald, which specializes in medical services . Enderlein’s subsidiary runs the Parkklinik Greifswald, which is part of the company . With Rainer Eppelmann , the last GDR defense minister, he negotiated a lease for the site of the former military medical section. In 1994 he bought it. Since 1996 he has been investigated for alleged embezzlement running into billions. The investigations were discontinued in 1998 with no results. Enderlein received compensation.

Enderlein has been a member of the Marseille-Kliniken supervisory board since January 2012 . He is a member of the Commerzbank regional advisory board (Berlin, Brandenburg, Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania).

With his wife Gudrun geb. Terpe he has a son and a daughter.

Works

literature

Web links

Individual evidence

  1. Dissertation: Damage to health caused by the medical evacuation of injured and sick people in the Second World War within the German Wehrmacht .
  2. a b c biography.
  3. Michael Jürgs: How are you, Germany? Populists. Profiteers. Patriots. A balance sheet of unity . Bertelsmann 2008.
  4. ^ Christiane Baumann: Greifswald. Cathedral and city in 1989/90. Schwerin 2010, p. 75.
  5. ^ Announcement from Marseille-Kliniken AG. ( Memento of the original from March 20, 2014 in the Internet Archive ) Info: The archive link was inserted automatically and has not yet been checked. Please check the original and archive link according to the instructions and then remove this notice. @1@ 2Template: Webachiv / IABot / www.marseille-kliniken.de
  6. Steffen Klusmann (ed.): 101 Haudegen der deutschen Wirtschaft (2006).