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European Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid Operations

Thailand: art therapy as a lifeline for Rohingya refugee children caught in limbo

For decades, the 2,400-kilometre border with Thailand has served as a crossing point for those seeking a better life. Among them are waves of Rohingya refugees, a persecuted ethnic, religious, and linguistic minority from Myanmar, who have been fleeing armed attacks and severe human rights violations since the 1970s. 

In recent months, the situation has deteriorated into a full-blown civil war between the military, which seized power through a military takeover in 2021, and opposition groups. 

The army is continuously increasing its violence against civilians, driving up displacement. There are now more than 3 million people internally displaced in the country. In northern Rakhine State, the military is also accused of stoking inter-communal tensions between ethnic Rakhine and Rohingya, and there are credible reports of detention and forced conscription of Rohingya following the military's conscription announcement. 

Thailand, however, is not a signatory to the 1951 Refugee Convention and treats asylum seekers as irregular migrants. Adults who are apprehended are sent to immigration detention centres, while children, who are often unaccompanied or separated from their families during the arduous journeys, are placed in shelters for children and families that often lack sufficient space. 

These children find themselves in a state of limbo, facing uncertainty about their futures. However, the International Organization for Migration (IOM), with humanitarian funding from the European Union, provides essential services during their stay, including protection, care, food, medical services, and mental health support.

View of a landscape; green bushes in front, some trees and a blue sky.
Thailand shares a long and porous border with Myanmar to the north and west. While some parts are secured with barb-wired fences, others are only divided by passageways like rivers, making unofficial crossings possible.
© European Union, 2024 (photographer: Mallika Panorat)
Children sitting in a room in a circle with an adi worker.
This shelter in the Thai western border province of Tak is currently home to 6 Rohingya refugee children who were separated from their families. There they receive protection, care, food, medical services and mental health support.
© European Union, 2024 (photographer: Lisa Hastert)
A doctor examening a woman seated on a chair.
Many reach Thailand after a long and arduous journey that exposes them to physical abuse, and lack of food and water. Most of them arrive in bad health and in need of medical care.
© European Union, 2024 (photographer: Mallika Panorat)
A child seated on a chair together with an aid worker and an interpreter.
The children, in addition to being separated from their families and far from home, face language barriers in Thailand. IOM interpreters are present during medical check-ups and mental health sessions to support them.
© European Union, 2024 (photographer: Mallika Panorat)
A table full with colourful drawings some being held by a young person.
Traumatic experiences and hardships, including losing their homes and family members, take a heavy toll on the mental health of refugee children. Art therapy is a powerful tool to help them express their feelings.
© European Union, 2024 (photographer: Mallika Panorat)
An aid worker holding up a paper with the text 'big emotions'. Pencils are on the floor and 2 other people in the background.
“Art is a way for the young refugees to express feelings they find rather difficult to share otherwise,” says Kate Taenghom, a psychologist for IOM. “Art can make them feel positive, and it can also be used as a tool for us to identify red flags.”
© European Union, 2024 (photographer: Mallika Panorat)
A group of children and an aid worker in the back. Colourful pencils and art work tools on the foreground.
Art supplies like watercolours, brushes, pencils, charcoals, cardboard boxes, buttons, and stickers are provided during the therapy. These tools allow the children to release their emotions using the materials of their choice.
© European Union, 2024 (photographer: Lisa Hastert)
© European Union, 2024 (photographer: Mallika Panorat)
“I drew this because sometimes I miss my parents and I feel sad,” says Abul*, a 14-year-old Rohingya refugee who became separated from his parents while fleeing Myanmar. It has been 2 years since he first arrived at the temporary shelter in Tak.
© European Union, 2024 (photographer: Mallika Panorat)
A girl holding a paper plate, with drawings on it, in front of her face. In the background a colourful wall with drawings of children playing.
“It feels like home, like family here, and I am happy," says 14-year-old Umme* after being asked to explain her work. “This gives us a bit of hope although, our parents aren’t here.” “Our only concern is that we don’t know when we will be able to leave.”
© European Union, 2024 (photographer: Mallika Panorat)
Group of aid workers sitting on the floor going over the drawings children created.
Through EU funding, IOM has supported over 1,000 refugees and migrants from Myanmar in more than 30 immigration detention centres and shelters across Thailand since 2022. Assistance also includes food supplements and other relief items.
© European Union, 2024 (photographer: Mallika Panorat)

*Names in this story have been changed to protect anonymity.

Story by Mallika Panorat, Information and Communication Assistant for Asia and the Pacific, EU Civil Protection and Humanitarian Aid Operations

Publication date: 18/06/2024