A prominent Republican congressman announced that he will push for a thorough investigation into the Democratic candidate Adam Hamawy if he is elected to the House of Representatives in the November elections, a warning that has placed the doctor's past under national scrutiny following his controversial victory in the New Jersey primaries.
Michael Lawler, chairman of the Middle East Subcommittee of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, stated that Hamawy must answer for his ties to Omar Abdel-Rahman, the Islamist cleric known as the ''Blind Sheikh,'' considered one of the intellectual architects of the 1993 bombing of the Twin Towers.
According to Lawler, the explanations provided so far by the candidate are insufficient for someone who could access classified information related to U.S. national security. The legislator maintained that citizens have the right to know all the details about Hamawy's past relationships with figures linked to Islamist extremism.
The controversy erupted just days after Hamawy won a Democratic primary with twelve candidates and became the favorite to secure a seat in a New Jersey district that has historically favored Democrats and has not elected a Republican in over two decades.

At the center of the controversy is Hamawy's role as a defense witness during the trial against Abdel-Rahman. The Islamist leader was convicted of conspiracy to commit terrorism after being linked to a series of bombing plots in the United States, including the 1993 attack on the ''World Trade Center,'' which resulted in six deaths and over a thousand injuries.
Court documents show that Hamawy testified during the trial and spoke about meetings he had with the cleric in the years leading up to his conviction. During his testimony, he described attending events where Abdel-Rahman participated and acknowledged frequently hearing references to ''jihad'' in his speeches.
Questions intensified after former federal prosecutor Andrew McCarthy, who led the case against the ''Blind Sheikh,'' recalled that Hamawy was not compelled to testify. According to McCarthy, the doctor voluntarily came forward to support the cleric's defense.

''He didn't have to show up unless he wanted to,'' the former prosecutor stated in recent remarks. McCarthy also asserted that Hamawy was fully aware of Abdel-Rahman's identity and influence when he decided to appear before the court.










