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UK: MS sufferer in cannabis trial tries to kill herself

The Independent

Thursday 03 Jul 2003

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A multiple sclerosis sufferer who has campaigned for the right to use
cannabis was in hospital yesterday after taking a suspected overdose on the
day her trial for supplying the drug was abandoned because of her failing
health.

Elizabeth Ivol, 55, known as Biz, faced charges of supplying cannabis to
other MS sufferers but the court was told yesterday that she was no longer
fit to stand trial. The Procurator Fiscal, Sue Foard, accepted the findings
of the doctor's report and said to continue the case would be inappropriate.

Ms Ivol was in a stable condition last night after being found unconscious
in her home on the Orkney island of South Ronaldsay by supporters from the
Legalise Cannabis Alliance, who had travelled to the island to convince her
not to kill herself.

The wheelchair-bound campaigner was charged with distributing, possessing
and producing cannabis. She said publicly that she intended to take her
life once the trial was over, regardless of the outcome, as a final protest
against the law stopping MS sufferers using the drug to alleviate pain. For
years, she has fought for the class B drug to be legalised for medical use
and openly made cannabis chocolate for herself and fellow sufferers.

But last August her home was raided by police and her cannabis plants,
computer and address book were seized. During her trial, which began two
weeks ago, Ms Ivol admitted making cannabis-laced chocolates, which were
sent to people with MS, but said she did not think she was doing anything
wrong. She said she took the drug to numb a condition that was like having
"barbed wire going through my spine.

"I have muscle spasms and my eyesight's failing, but it has not gone yet.
It is very, very painful," Ms Ivol, who was diagnosed with the incurable
disease in the early 1990s, told Kirkwall Sheriff Court. During the trial,
which was held at the leisure centre to allow access to her wheelchair, she
said she tried medication suggested by her doctor but that some drugs had
"horrific" side-effects.

"It was either cannabis or nothing. I tried everything else and nothing
worked," she said. Ms Ivol said she had resisted using cannabis because of
the stigma surrounding the drug, but eventually began smoking one joint
each evening.

After finding it was the only way to control her condition, Ms Ivol made
what she called "special Belgian chocolates" to help a non-smoking MS
sufferer. She even developed a formula for cannabis patches that can be
applied to the skin.

Yesterday, hours before she was found unconscious, Ms Ivol told BBC
Scotland's Good Morning Scotland that she was disappointed not to be able
to use the trial to campaign for legalising medical cannabis. She said she
would make a final protest by overdosing on painkillers.

"I will get stoned before I do it and then I will go to sleep. Then it will
be over and done with and someone else can take over from me - I'm tired."

* The use of cannabis by adolescents is threatening their mental health, a
leading psychiatrist has warned.

Professor Robin Murray, of the Institute of Psychiatry in London, said a
study of 4,000 Dutch people suggested that cannabis users were seven times
more likely to develop mental problems. He said the drug might interact
with a genetic weakness in some people to trigger mental problems.

Meanwhile, the annual conference of the British Medical Association in
Torquay rejected by a large majority calls for cannabis to be legalised.


 

 

 

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