Italian writer: Alber Kamyya didn't die in an accident, he was killed by KGB.

Sixty years after French Nobel Prize laureate Albert Camus (Alber Kamy) died in a traffic accident at the age of 46, a new book argues that he was killed by KGB spies after his clear anti-Suvian rhetoric. Italian writer Giovanni Catelli launched such a theory in 2011, writing [...]
Italian writer Giovanni Catelli launched such a theory in 2011, writing in the newspaper Corriere della Sera that had discovered this in the journals of the famous Czech poet Jan Zabranas, which meant that Kamy's death had not been an accident. Now, Catelli has expanded his research into a book called “The Death of Kamy”, followed by Periscope from The Guardian.
Kamyya died on January 4, 1960, when his publisher Michel Gallitard lost control of his car by crashing into a tree. The famous writer had been killed instantly, while Gallard had been killed a few days later.
Three years before this tragic event, the writer of the “Foreigner” and “Mutaja” had won the Nobel Prize for “the focus of human consciousness problems in our times”. Catelli believes that a passage in the diaries of Zabrana explains why the death of Kamy had happened.
In the summer of 1980, a man with strong ties told the poet that the Russian secret service had been responsible for killing the famous Frenchman. The order is allegedly given by Dmitry Shepriov, the minister of internal affairs in the Soviet Union, due to an article published by Kamy in the French newspaper Franz-Tireur published in March 1957.
The campaign was publicly made with the Hungarian uprising since autumn 1956, because it was highly critical of the Soviets' actions in the riots in Hungary. He also supported Russian writer Boris Patternak, who was seen as anti-Soviet. /Periscopi












