However, PAAS and the government have agreed to meet again to find out a solution to the sensitive issue.
"We have had no results from the meeting," said Varun Patel, one of the 11 representatives of PAAS, told mediapersons after the six-hour long meet.
In its bid to reach out to the politically and numerically strong community ahead of next year's Assembly polls, the government had last week extended an invitation for talks to PAAS.
However, government has maintained that taking a call on the demand raised by Patels is not a small issue which can be resolved in a single meeting.
Also Read
"We have told them that such agitations for reservations are going on in Rajasthan, Harayana and other states and everywhere there is a problem," the minister said.
He said the ministerial group will take up the demands of Patidars with state cabinet as well as Central government.
"After listening to their demands, we have told them that as our committee is appointed for negotiations, we will take their demands to our Central leadership and our Gujarat cabinet. We will discuss all the issues and get back to them for the second meeting, for which they have agreed," he said.
some kind of tactic to buy time, we will wait till Monday for some concrete proposals from the government and if they are not satisfactory then we will intensify this agitation under the leadership of Hardik Patel," Patel said.
He alleged that the ministers had attended the meeting sans any homework and that the government representatives had no decision-making power.
In a message sent from Udaipur, where he is living in exile as part of the conditional bail granted to him by the Gujarat High Court earlier, Hardik said the Gujarat government cannot make any decision on reservation independently but have to rely on Centre.
Meanwhile, the deputy CM added that government has advised PAAS to make a proper representation before the OBC commission if they want Patidar community's inclusion in OBC category.
Last year, the violent agitations by Patidars seeking reservation in government jobs and education had rattled the government, then led by Anandiben Patel.
The government had later introduced quota for economically weaker sections among the non-reserved category to pacify the Patel community. However, Gujarat HC quashed the government's move, terming it unconstitutional.
The four main demands of the Patel community are: constitutionally valid reservation, creation of Patidar Development Board for the development of the community, justice and proper compensation to family members of those who died during the quota agitation and punishment to government officials responsible for committing 'atrocities' on the community when the agitation turned violent.