Philippine negotiator Silvestre Bello III said the government move aims to foster talks for a cease-fire accord and a peace pact with New People's Army rebels. Troops have been battling communist and Muslim militants simultaneously in the country's south.
"The Philippine government hereby correspondingly reciprocates with the same declaration of not undertaking offensive operations against the New People's Army," Bello said in a statement, without specifying when such a suspension of government offensives would take effect and under what terms.
Three communist guerrillas were killed in Davao Oriental province and two others died in Compostela Valley in separate clashes with army troops Saturday, military officials said.
In the central town of Maasin, about 50 communist rebels stormed a police station and seized 12 rifles and pistols, two-way radios, laptop computers, jewelry and a patrol car, said police Chief Superintendent Cesar Hawthorne Binag, who condemned the attack. Criminal complaints will be filed against the attackers, he said.
While President Rodrigo Duterte has pursued talks with the communist rebels, who have been waging one of Asia's longest-running Marxist insurgencies, he has expressed outrage over continuing guerrilla attacks. The rebels have also protested what they said were continuing military assaults on their rural strongholds.
The accusations and other differences have hampered negotiations being brokered by Norway, causing a scheduled round of talks to be canceled last month.
Duterte has declared martial law in the south to deal with the most daring attack yet by IS-linked militants that has alarmed governments in Southeast Asia.
The intense fighting, now confined in four of Marawi's 96 villages, has left 242 militants, 56 soldiers and policemen and 26 civilians dead and turned the heartland of the mosque- dotted Islamic city into a smoldering battlefield with military aircraft bombarding militant positions with rockets and bombs in daily airstrikes.
More than 100 militants holding an unspecified number of civilian hostages continue to fight troops but their resistance has considerably weakened after daily battle setbacks, the military says.
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