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You are listening to the fifth floor.
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This is the fifth floor, at the heart of global storytelling,
with BBC journalists from all around the world.
I'm your host, Farhanak Amidhi.
For the past six years,
the Indian government has been fighting a violent group of Maoists in the country.
They are followers of the late Chinese leader Mao Zedong and have carried out bombings and killings in different parts of India.
Now the authorities say they are on the brink of defeating this insurgency and have said that they will be fully removed by March 2026.
There is one group that has been attributed with the recent success against them,
known as the DRG, or District Reserve Guard.
They are a police unit with the sole purpose of defeating the insurgents.
Jugal Purohit reports for the BBC in India and recently travelled to meet the DRG and hear from local people caught up in the crossfire.
I asked him first to explain who exactly these Maoists are.
We would describe them as rebels who have taken up arms against the state.
They have been influenced by the communist ideology.
Many people trace the origins of today's Maoist insurgency of India to something that happened in pre-independence India in 1946,