Britain’s first woman Sikh MP Preet Kaur Gill was elected to Home Affairs Select Committee in the UK Parliament.
She will be one of 11 MPs on the cross-party home affairs committee.
The Home Affairs Select Committee is an influential cross-party panel in the UK Parliament that examines the workings of the Home Office.
It investigates the spending, policy and administration of the ministerial department. The committee chooses its own subjects of inquiry within the remit of the home office.
Previous inquiries have looked at extremism, immigration, hate crime, asylum, drugs, human trafficking, prostitution, extradition, counter-terrorism and the police.
It publishes reports and the Government must respond to its recommendations.
Labour party MP Yvette Cooper was recently elected unopposed as chairman of the committee.
Earlier it was chaired by Keith Vaz, Britain’s longest-serving Indian-origin MP, who had stepped down in September 2016.
Preet Kaur Gill had won the Edgbaston seat for the Labour party in the June 2017 snap general election.
She also has been chosen to lead the All Party Parliamentary Group (APPG) for British Sikhs, which promotes the interests of Sikhs in Britain.
Gill’s whose family is from Jamsher, in Jalandhar, Punjab.
Her father, Daljit Singh, had moved and settled in the UK in 1962.