Idris Elba is approaching the public authority to promptly boycott the offer of purported "zombie" blades and cleavers, to lessen the quantity of youngsters losing their lives.
The Luther star told the BBC an arranged regulation change to get the boycott should be optimized.
He blamed lawmakers for not giving the issue "the center it merits".
The Work space has recently declared plans to give police more powers to hold onto blades.
Garments to address the casualties of blade wrongdoing will be shown in London's Parliament Square on Monday.
Coordinators trust the heaps of garments will give a visual exhibit of the tremendous human expense of blade wrongdoing to MPs getting back from the Christmas break.
A showcase at Parliament Square is expected to be a recognition for the lives lost
The occasion is essential for Elba's Don't Stop Your Future mission, which works with nearby networks and notable brands to attempt to handle serious brutality.
London-conceived Elba said he "can't keep quiet as youthful lives are lost to ruthless and coldblooded wrongdoings".
'A mother's intuition'
Yemi Hughes, whose 19-year-old child Andre Aderemi was killed in 2016, has given her help to Elba's mission - and has given the outfit her child was wearing when he was killed.
Andre was cut on different occasions out so everyone can see in Croydon, south London.
Addressing the BBC's Radio 4 Today program, Ms Hughes said that she had dropped her child off "with overwhelming sadness".
"I don't have the foggiest idea why I said those words, I guess it's a mother's intuition," however he took a gander at me with an extraordinary enormous grin and said, 'Don't stress mum, I'll be fine, I love you," and with that I drove off."
In the span of 20 minutes, Ms Hughes had gotten a call from a companion's mom who said somebody had been cut.
"I realized she was discussing Andre despite the fact that she hadn't said his name, and afterward she let out this all-powerful shout that I'd always remember, she'd clearly seen it was him."
When Ms Hughes got to the scene, ambulances and police were at that point there. She followed the rescue vehicle to the emergency clinic, where they got the news that her child had kicked the bucket.
Ms Hughes has discussed her disappointment that blade wrongdoing is as yet a major issue: "Our singular voices have not been heard however yet our torment keeps on being felt by families whose kids are as yet being killed.
"Youngsters need to have a good sense of reassurance in their networks and fundamental reasons for youth viciousness killed right away."
Elba is likewise delivering a solitary, Blades Down, on the side of his mission.
The track is about his dissatisfaction with the public authority for what he sees as their inaction on blade wrongdoing.
Addressing the BBC's Radio 4 Today program, Elba said he needs more subsidizing for bunches working with youngsters.
The entertainer says he can't 'keep quiet' on blade wrongdoing
Albeit most popular as an entertainer, Elba has delivered music and teamed up with craftsmen like Jay-Z and James Blake.
His greatest hit came when he gave visitor vocals on Wiley's hit Boasty in 2019.
The most recent police figures for Britain and Ridges from July 2022 to June 2023 show that around 247 individuals lost their lives because of blade wrongdoing.
Those numbers do exclude youngsters like 15-year-old Alfie Lewis who was lethally wounded in Leeds in November 2023 or 16-year-old Harry Pitman, who was killed on New Year's Eve 2023.
Their demises will be kept in the following arrangement of wrongdoing figures.
Elba's Don't Stop Your Future mission is additionally arguing for the quick boycott of zombie blades and cleavers.
Zombie blades are characterized as weapons having "a front line, a serrated edge and pictures or words proposing they are utilized for savagery".
They were first added to the public authority's rundown of disallowed hostile weapons in 2016 however Work has said an escape clause permitting the offer of the weapons online still exists.
In August 2023, Rishi Sunak divulged plans to boycott a greater amount of the weapons and give police additional powers to hold onto cleavers and zombie blades. However, it isn't clear when the new regulation will come into force.
Patrick Green from the Ben Kinsella Trust has said activity is required at this point: "Four months have passed since we were guaranteed the regulation we so frantically need to boycott these weapons, yet the Bill has just barely begun its excruciatingly sluggish excursion through Parliament.
"The public authority has shown that when they consider it significant, parliamentary time can be found to assist Bills with direness.
"All in all, why, when we realize that these blades are being utilized to end the existences of our youngsters, would they say they are not focusing on a boycott with a similar criticalness?"