"Due to inadequate homework and the delay in taking the delegation to the state, we did not achieve more. The homework required to be done by the government was to identify proposals from several working group recommendations and the Interlocutors report of 2010, and to have crystallised the issues," he said.
Yechury, who was part of the delegation, said the homework would have enabled a "focussed discussion" with stakeholders around specific proposals and alternatives.
Referring to his outreach to Hurriyat leaders along with CPI national secretary D Raja, Sharad Yadav of JD(U) and RJD's JP Yadav during the visit, Yechury said the same should be followed up properly.
He also recalled former Deputy Prime Minister L K Advani's holding of talks with Hurriyat leaders during NDA-1 regime (in January 2004).
Four of the five Hurriyat leaders met the delegation, while Syed Ali Shah Geelani did not. The separatist leaders had collectively decided not to engage in any political dialogue with the delegation in view of the situation in the Valley, he wrote.
Pointing towards the post-visit statement issued by the delegation, which had appealed people of the state to shun violence and resolve issues through discussion, he said it was now incumbent upon the government to implement the understanding in "right earnest".
In this context Prime Minister Narendra Modi's slogan of 'Vikas aur Vishwas' (development and trust) would sound "hollow and meaningless" if not backed by "concrete" actions, he said.
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