On Friday evening, President Abdel Fattah al-Saysi received a telephone call from US President Donald Trump, during which he expressed s...
On Friday evening, President Abdel Fattah al-Saysi received a telephone call from US President Donald Trump, during which he expressed sincere condolences on the victims of the terrorist incident that targeted the Marmina church at Helwan.
Ambassador Bassam Radi, spokesman for the presidential presidency, said that the US president had confirmed the full solidarity of the United States with Egypt, its support and standing at its side in its war against the Ariam.
The spokesman said the President expressed sincere gratitude to the US President for his condolences and sympathy, stressing the need for concerted international efforts to combat and eradicate terrorism at its roots. A terrorist attack on the Marmina church on Friday morning in the Helwan district killed nine citizens and injured five others.
The terrorist organization ISIL formally adopted the attack and declared what is known as the organization's "deep" agency responsible for the incident, in a statement stating: "A security detachment of the Islamic State carried out the attack on the Marmina church in Helwan, south of Cairo." The Interior Ministry announced that the bomber was Ibrahim Ismail Ismail Mustafa, born on July 4, 1984, and was staying in the street of the al-Saad Dam in El-Helwan. The ministry revealed that the gunman who launched the attack had been involved in several terrorist attacks by the security forces and Copts, most notably the attack on a car carrying men police at Helwan in May last year, the attack adopted by ISIS Egypt, followed by the "Targeting churches" cell led by the fugitive terrorist AMR Saad.
In the details of the statement, the interior said that Ismail alleges the elements of the bus attack on the micro-vehicle belonging to the police department Helwan in 2016, which resulted in the martyrdom of one officer and seven police officers, the subject of case No. 513/2016, attended the security of a higher state. "
