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Quiet end for cannabis campaigner

Billy Briggs

The Herald. Glasgow

Monday 06 Sep 2004

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A PARALYSED multiple sclerosis sufferer who fought a court battle in an
attempt to legally use cannabis to relieve her symptoms has died, it
emerged yesterday.

Elizabeth Ivol, 56, known as Biz, took ill with a chest infection last week
and died on Sunday night at her home in Herston, on the Orkney island of
South Ronaldsay. She had refused any medical intervention other than
morphine for pain relief. Ms Ivol campaigned to make cannabis available to
sufferers of MS and other debilitating diseases.

Lucia Day, Ms Ivol's 55-year-old sister, said yesterday that her sibling
had "slipped away quietly" at her home.

During a high-profile trial on Orkney, in June 2003, a wheelchair-bound Ms
Ivol described to a court in Kirkwall the excruciating pain she suffered
from her condition.

She was charged with handling the class B drug and could have been jailed
for making cannabis chocolate for herself and fellow sufferers.

Ms Ivol denied the three charges against her, even though she admitted in
court that she had possessed, produced and distributed the drug. She told
of how she developed cannabis Belgian chocolates and patches to be applied
directly to the skin, to help alleviate the symptoms of MS.

Ms Ivol told Kirkwall Sheriff Court that she began taking the drug to numb
constant pain, which she described as feeling like "barbed wire going
through my spine".

The court heard that her life had become almost unbearable due to her
condition, which she was diagnosed with in the early nineties.

She said her former GP had recommended cannabis after she had tried a long
list of legal medication, some of which had horrific side-effects. Ms Ivol
came up with the idea, along with others, of making the chocolate after
agreeing to help a non-smoking MS sufferer.

Hours before the case was dropped on health grounds in July 2003, Ms Ivol
was taken to Balfour Hospital, Kirkwall, after a paracetamol overdose.

She had told The Herald the previous evening that she was planning to take
her own life.

"I have got it (suicide) all planned. In many ways, I wish my brain went
first because of the MS and I wouldn't be so aware of what was going on,"
Ms Ivol said at the time.

"I am fed up with going on like this. I have looked into it and have
decided to take paracetamol because, if you take enough, it just destroys
your internal organs.

"I want to do it soon and I have to be very careful that no-one is around,
so they don't face prosecution for helping me," she explained.

Fellow campaigners travelled to Orkney and camped in her garden to try to
persuade Ms Ivol not to take her own life.

However, after her suicide attempt she told The Herald she would keep
trying until she died: "I took 25 paracetamol and that didn't work. I can't
seem to get anything right these days. I was just going to walk into the
sea and drown, but I can't walk. I'm just going to have to figure out
another way of doing it next time I'll have to make sure I do it properly."

Her sister said yesterday: "Biz developed a chest infection several days
ago but did not want any medical intervention. She was put on a morphine
drip for the pain though. She slipped away quietly last night.

"The funeral will be on Thursday but Biz did not want a proper funeral, no
service and no minister, so it will just be at the graveside," said Ms Day.

A spokesman for the Legalise Cannabis Alliance said Ms Ivol was a "special
woman whose death was a very sad loss".

He added: "I'm rather stuck for words. Biz touched the lives of and
endeared herself to everyone who knew her, including those involved in
prosecuting her.

"There are 4000 people in the UK who now take the special cannabis
chocolate she made and the fight for legalisation will go on."


 

 

 

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