Vaidik also defended his action, saying he has been meeting all kinds of people and it was a "simple thing" for him.
"Journalists in Pakistan know me for decades. They made a gesture (about meeting Saeed) to me and I said alright I will meet him. It was no big deal for me. It was a simple thing. For me it was like a normal meeting. I have been meeting the Maoists of Nepal, Taliban of Afghanistan...," he told reporters.
Congress leader Digvijay Singh raised questions as to whether Vaidik met Saeed as an envoy of the NDA government or as a personal envoy of Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
"If they raise the issue in Parliament, it is good as they will publicise me against my will. But nothing will come out of it," Vaidik RPT Vaidik told reporters.
Ramdev, meanwhile, came to Vaidik's defence, saying he would have tried to effect a "change of heart" in the globally-designated terrorist.