Albert Camus died instantly when the car he was travelling in spun off the road in icy conditions and hit a tree An Italian newspaper suggests that the KGB might have been behind the crash that led to the killing of French literary giant Albert Camus in 1960.
Corriere della Sera claims that there may have been a secret behind the accident, stressing that Soviet spies may have killed Camus for criticizing the Soviet Union.
The newspaper presented the theory based on the remarks of Italian academic and poet Giovanni Catelli who noted that a passage in a diary written by Czech poet and translator Jan Zabrana and published as a book entitled Cely Zivot was missing from the Italian translation.
In the missing Paragraph, Zabrana expressed that he has heard from a man that the accident, in which Albert Camus was killed in 1960, was arranged by Soviet spies.
"The order was given personally by Dmitri Trofimovic Shepilov, the Soviet foreign minister, as a reaction to an article published in a French magazine in March 1957, in which Camus attacked Shepilov, as narrated in the passage, Guardian reported.
Later Camus arouse anger among Soviet authorities by supporting the Russian author Boris Pasternak, the author of Doctor Zhivago, a work banned by Stalin.
Albert Camus was a French-African novelist, essayist and playwright. For all the interwoven stories of life's meaning and humanity's struggles, he was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature.
The Plague (1948), The Stranger (1946), The Rebel (1954) and The Myth of Sisyphus (1955) are some of his famous works.
FGP/PKH