Domestic Egyptian President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi summoned the national security council, and said that those wounded could receive medical care at military hospitals. The
Egyptian Council of Churches, through its secretary-general, priest Rifaat Fathy, expressed its condolences to the victims' relatives and to Pope Tawadros II, and announced its support to Sisi's swift response to the events and to the counter-terrorism efforts of the country's security apparatus. The head of
Al-Azhar, Egypt's leading center for the study of Sunni Islam, Sheikh
Ahmed el-Tayeb, denounced the deadly attacks, calling them a "despicable terrorist bombing that targeted the lives of innocents." Following the attacks, Muslims gathering inside mosques to donate blood for victims. Egyptians also showed solidarity with the victims by using a hashtag on social media that translates to "your terrorism brings us together."
From a Coptic Orthodox Priest Father Boules George, a Coptic Orthodox priest in Cairo, delivered a Holy Week sermon the night of the attacks, addressing the attack, and the attackers. In it, he expresses his gratitude and love to those who oppress the church.
International Representatives of the governments of
Armenia,
Australia,
Canada,
China,
Colombia,
Cyprus,
France,
Germany,
Greece,
Hungary,
India,
Indonesia,
Iran,
Iraq,
Israel,
Japan,
Jordan,
Lebanon,
Malaysia,
Morocco,
Pakistan,
Poland,
Romania,
Russia,
Saudi Arabia,
Singapore,
Switzerland,
Syria,
Turkey, and the
United States condemned the attacks and expressed condolences, as did the
United Nations Security Council and
United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres. The
Holy See received news of the attacks while
Pope Francis was holding the Palm Sunday mass in front of thousands in
St. Peter's Square. The Pope, who was due to visit Egypt on 28 April, offered his condolences to his "brother" Tawadros II and to "all of the dear Egyptian nation" during his speech, while praying for the dead and the wounded. The
World Council of Churches and the
Archbishop of Canterbury,
Justin Welby, also spoke out against the attacks. Despite the events, the Pope's visit to Egypt proceeded as planned. Saudi Arabia's highest religious body, the
Council of Senior Scholars (also known as the Senior Council of Ulema), condemned the attacks, saying the bombings represented a "criminal act considered forbidden by Islamic consensus...these bombings have violated several tenants of Islam; from treachery to sin and aggression." The international
Muslim Brotherhood condemned the attack as "painfully tragic" and that "the blood of the innocent will be a curse on the oppressors" whilst stating blame was due to the government which took power after the
2013 coup in Egypt. After the attacks,
Israel closed the
Taba Border Crossing with Egypt. ==See also==