London: Indian-origin academic Prem Sikka, an Emeritus Professor of Accounting at the University of Sheffield in northern England, is among 36 new peers in the UK's House of Lords.
Former England cricket team captain Sir Ian Botham and UK Prime Minister Boris Johnson's younger brother and former MP, Jo Johnson, are also among those who will now go on to become Lords after the list of peerages, recommended by the government, were confirmed by Queen Elizabeth II on Friday.
"The call for social justice and emancipatory change needs to be heard in all quarters, inside and outside Parliament," said Sikka, who was nominated in the Political Peerages category by former Labour Party Leader Jeremy Corbyn.
Botham considered one of England's cricketing greats in a career spanning 102 Test matches with 5,200 runs and 383 wickets, is known for his vocal support for Brexit.
The cricket commentator and Chairman of Durham County Cricket Club were knighted by the Queen in 2007 and will now sit in the House of Lords as an independent crossbench peer.
In contrast, the UK PM's brother Joseph Johnson was a staunch 'Remainer' against the UK's exit from the European Union (EU). He went on to quit his brother's Cabinet last year after citing an unresolvable tension between loyalty to his brother and national interest.
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He was nominated to the Lords by Boris Johnson under the category of Dissolution Peerages.