Corruption
charges threaten the country's Islamist leader.
Dec. 26,
2013 3:07 p.m. ET
The Wall Street Journal
Recep
Tayyip Erdogan has spent the past week blaming a burgeoning corruption scandal
on foreign plotters. But Wednesday's trio of resignations from his cabinet,
which were intended to insulate Turkey 's
Islamist Prime Minister, had the effect of bringing the scandal to his
doorstep.
The
Interior and Economy Ministers did their duty by denouncing the investigations
and professing the prime minister's (and their own) innocence. But Erdogan
Bayraktar, the Minister for the Environment and a confidant of the PM, went out
with a bang. Mr. Bayraktar said Wednesday that he was pressured to resign to
shield Mr. Erdogan from the scandal, which concerns alleged payoffs to
facilitate real-estate development deals. He also suggested that if it was
right for him to step aside for the country's sake, then Mr. Erdogan should
resign as well.