The 52-year-old actor and musician, together with Home Secretary Yvette Cooper and Sir Keir Starmer, will be present for the first-ever knife crime summit on Monday morning.
As a campaigner against knife crime, he will assist in bringing together neighborhood associations and the relatives of victims who have personal knowledge that can be utilized to influence legislation.
The government intends to cut knife crime in half over the next ten years with the aid of the partnership, which will include his Elba Hope Foundation.
Ninja swords are being outlawed, and the legislation governing the selling of knives online is being reinforced.
The coalition will include members from the NHS, the education sector, the police, tech businesses, and grassroots organizations in addition to community leaders and grassroots organizations, the government announced.
He met with the King earlier this year to talk about more strategies to lower teenage violence, especially through the King’s Trust.
The Luther star was given a £1,500 scholarship to attend the National Youth Music Theatre when he was a teenager by the Prince’s Trust.
He started his own campaign, Don’t Stop Your Future, in January by demanding an immediate prohibition on zombie knives in order to expedite the previous administration’s preparations for a ban later this year.