Djibouti - Djibouti's president has warned Yemen's civil war and a resurgent Al-Qaeda pose a threat to the Middle East, but pledged continuing support to refugees fleeing the conflict, he told AFP in an interview.
Ismail Omar Guelleh said the war in Yemen, on the other side of a narrow sea channel from the Horn of African nation of Djibouti, was stoking dangerous rivalries between Shia and Sunni Muslims, bolstering Al-Qaeda's franchise in the country and posing wider risks for the region.
Guelleh also warned the violence could allow the Yemen-based Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) franchise to expand its power and control.
AQAP "is taking advantage of these renewed tensions between Sunnis and Shias... this may create a big gap between Yemeni people, who had never felt the difference between the two communities," Guelleh said in an interview at the presidential palace in Djibouti.
In late March, a Saudi-led coalition began air strikes against Shia Huthi rebels, after the insurgents, who are backed by ex-soldiers loyal to former president Ali Abdullah Saleh, seized control of large parts of Yemen.
Guelleh said the Saudi-led military action was necessary, but worried the war would split communities, with Shias becoming a target for both Saudi airstrikes and Al-Qaeda's Sunni extremists.
The fighting in Yemen has already sent thousands fleeing across the sea to Djibouti, with many more expected.
"Our borders remain open, they have always been," said Guelleh, president since 1999 of the strategic former French colony, whose port guards the entrance to the Red Sea and Suez Canal.
At its narrowest point, there are only some 30 kilometres (20 miles) between Djibouti and Yemen, across the Bab al-Mandeb strait, the key shipping channel that separates Africa from Arabia.
AFP