Cyclone Gaja: India girl segregated during period dies Published duration 21 November 2018

image copyright Reuters image caption Cyclone Gaja has killed at least 46 people so far in the coastal state

Villagers in India's southern state of Tamil Nadu are grieving the death of a 14-year-old girl who died in a cyclone after being forced to sleep separately because she was menstruating.

Her family told BBC Tamil that she was trapped in the hut on 16 November when the cyclone made landfall.

Some villagers said this was a "wake up call" as it was common practice to segregate menstruating girls.

Cyclone Gaja is known to have killed at least 46 people in the coastal state.

Menstruation is taboo in large parts of rural India. Women are traditionally believed to be impure during their periods.

The family of the girl, S Vijayalakshmi, lives in a house next to the hut but they survived the storm. Her grandmother, S Visalakshi, said they couldn't rescue her as a coconut tree had fallen on the hut, which made it impossible to reach her.

image copyright Reuters image caption The storm has uprooted thousands of trees

She said Vijayalakshmi's parents had known that the storm was approaching but they couldn't keep her anywhere else since they lived in a coconut grove, far from the rest of the village, known as Anaikudi.

"I told them to take her to a different place. But within hours, the cyclone had struck and we couldn't move anywhere," she said.

"We are shattered," she told BBC Tamil's Pramila Krishnan. "When we saw the tree, we lost hope. We waited for villagers to help us remove the tree and pull her out of the hut."

She added that they had rushed her to the hospital but doctors said that she had died hours ago and declared her dead on arrival.

Veerasena, a local social activist, said both rich and poor families followed the tradition of forcing girls to sleep separately while they were menstruating.

image caption The storm destroyed more than 80,000 hectares of farm land

Powerful winds uprooted trees and the storm destroyed more than 80,000 hectares of farm land across 12 different districts, according to official estimates.

Fishing and cash crops, such as coconuts and tamarind, are a major source of livelihood in the region and both have been severely affected; fishing boats have been wrecked and many homes in costal villages have been flooded with sea water.

There have been protests by villagers in some of the districts, alleging that the government has not been providing them with basic staples such as food and water.