Audio By Carbonatix
Juri Ratas has resigned but denies any wrongdoing after a probe was opened into his ruling Center Party and its links with an Estonian businessman. A company owned by a party donor got a state loan with generous terms.
Estonia's prime minister, Juri Ratas, resigned Wednesday after his ruling Center Party came under investigation as part of a corruption probe.
President Kersti Kaljulaid now has 14 days to name a new prime minister who would then have to be approved by parliament.

"Today, I made a decision to resign as prime minister," Ratas, who is the chairman of the party, said in a Facebook post following an hours-long party board meeting.
Ratas said he hoped his resignation would help "shed light on all the circumstances and reach clarity."
The 42-year-old insisted that he had not made "any malicious or knowingly wrong decisions."
The investigation centers on the Porto Franco property company. Porto Franco received a large state loan and struck a lucrative deal with city authorities in the capital, Tallinn, whose mayor is also from the party.
The owner of the company's father, businessman Hillar Teder, donated large sums to the Center Party.
"As head of government, I did not feel in the case of Porto Franco that any minister or party had tried to sway the government's decisions in an illegal direction,” Ratas said in his statement.
Among other suspects in the corruption investigation is Kersti Kracht, an adviser to Finance Minister Martin Helme from the far-right EKRE party.

Ratas' resignation could scupper plans for a controversial same-sex marriage referendum that the coalition government had been planning to hold this spring.
Ratas, prime minister since late 2016, lost the 2019 general election, in which the center-right Reform Party emerged as the largest party.
He then blocked the winner from taking power by forming a surprise coalition of his left-leaning Center Party, the conservative Fatherland party and EKRE that gave the three parties a majority in parliament.
Estonia’s next general election is due in March 2023.
Latest Stories
-
Can Parliament enforce its own laws?
8 minutes -
ECG announces major transformer upgrade at Batsonaa – see the affected areas
9 minutes -
Ghanaian released after 77 days in Burkinabe detention
17 minutes -
Football Noise, Economic Silence
18 minutes -
Replacing Haruna and Muntaka in Parliament was strategic for Election 2024 – Asiedu Nketia, Osei Kyei-Mensah-Bonsu explain the plot
30 minutes -
Security service recruitment medical results to be released next week – Interior Minister
32 minutes -
Ghana’s tech prodigies set for Geneva after triumphant ‘Robotics for Good’ national qualifiers
44 minutes -
World Bank document shows 27 countries seeking to ensure access to crisis funds
52 minutes -
Mahama says Ghana’s IMF programme was close to derailment before he took over
54 minutes -
Uganda confirms 3 new Ebola cases, bringing total to 5
54 minutes -
Senegal president sacks PM Sonko, dissolves government after months of friction
55 minutes -
Security recruitment medical results to be released next week – Interior Minister
58 minutes -
Mahama rules out IMF ‘kenkey and waakye parties’, takes swipe at erstwhile Akufo-Addo gov’t
1 hour -
Mahama says Ghana’s economy still needs major reforms despite IMF progress
1 hour -
Ghana Card is a critical national asset – Interior Minister
1 hour