MANILA – Philippine government and Moro negotiators are drafting a preliminary agreement to settle a decades-long rebellion in the country's south, but the insurgents said Tuesday their insurrection won't end until a final pact is concluded. The initial “framework agreement” with the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) will be made public before it's signed in a few months, government negotiator Marvic Leonen said. It would be the most significant progress in years of negotiations to settle a rebellion that has caused more than 120,000 deaths, held back development in the south and sparked worries that rebel strongholds could become breeding grounds of Al-Qaeda-affiliated extremists. The 11,000-strong rebel group has been fighting for self-rule for minority Muslims in the predominantly Roman Catholic nation's south. It dropped a demand for a separate Muslim state but still seeks the expansion of an existing Muslim autonomous region and more powers and resources to rehabilitate the violent and poverty-wracked area. The initial accord will contain general agreements on key issues, including the extent of power, revenues and territory to be granted to a Muslim-administered region, rebel negotiator Mohagher Iqbal said. A transition commission would be established after the signing to work out the details of the initial pact, which hopefully would lead to a final accord as soon as three years later, he said. “There is now hope for peace and recovery,” Leonen told a news conference, adding the expected preliminary accord would end a long era of antagonism but might not rapidly end violence in a region that has suffered much from war and remain saddled with large numbers of illegal firearms and warring armed groups. Presidential adviser Teresita Deles said the negotiators consulted legal experts and affected communities to draw wide backing for the accord. In 2008, the planned signing of a preliminary pact was scuttled when opponents went to the Supreme Court, which declared the agreement unconstitutional, prompting three rebel commanders to attack Christian communities in the south. The attacks and an ensuing military offensive killed more than 100 people and displaced about 750,000 villagers before a cease-fire was forged. — AP