Many Non-Government & Non-profit organisations are working in Pakistan without the prior permission of Ministry of Interior ,Provincial Governments and concerned DCOs violating the National action Plan (NAP).Even a "Development Alternative Inc" (DAI) was registered with Securities & Exchange Commission of Pakistan as a profitable company is serving as NGO in Muzaffargarh, Nanakana Sahib, Hyderabad, Alipur, Kotadu and Lahore through local NGOs under "Azm-e-Pakistan"project. Official sources told that Sanjh Preet of Nankana Sahib, Bardag (Lahore), WSO ,Sanjh Foundation(Muzaffargarh) ,Hello (Alipur) MSSP (Hyderabad) and Sanjh Pakistan (Kotadu) neither got Non-objection certificate from the DCO nor have any authority to launch any foreign funded project. Ministry of Interior sources said that "Development Alternative Inc" (DAI) never applied for registration or NOC under the policy for regulation of International Non-Government Organisation introduced on October 1st, 2015.A retired DMG group officer Saeed Ahmed Khan is looking after the affairs of DAi as Deputy Country Chief.This NGO has claimed to serve for capacity building of religious seminaries of different schools of thought in Pakistan under “Azm-e-Pakistan” project. But no one knows whether this project was approved by the ministry of Interior, or Religious affairs or any law enforcing agency. Regardless of their cause or modus operandi, all NGOs are top heavy with entrenched, well paid with perks and benefits and elite status bureaucracies (Ask NGOs for audited reports and that what percentage is spent on their administration). The bulk of the income of most non-governmental organizations, even the largest ones, comes from – foreign governments and foundations associated with some western think tanks. In fact many NGOs serve as official contractors for foreign governments as did the Black Water during the massive earthquake in northern Pakistan. A construction company, using Backwater experts provided help to US agencies in mapping the terrain in Kashmir while acting as charity organization collaborating with Pakistani diaspora. NGOs normally serve as long arms of their sponsoring states – gathering intelligence, burnishing their image, and promoting their interest. There is a revolving door between the staff of NGOs and government bureaucracies the world over making it difficult to track the organizers. In Pakistan eighty-seven percent of the NGOs are involved in the education sector subsidized and supported by numerous foreign governments, United States specifically Scandinavian and British governments with their agencies assaulting Pakistan’s ideology and cultural base, challenging independence and integrity of the country and Islamic values in the name of progress and education. The NGOs world-wide have become the latest vehicle for upward mobility (also emphasized in O level curriculum of Pakistan) for the ambitious and already entrenched and well to do elite classes. NGOs are busy bodies, preachers, critics, do-gooders, and professional altruists, self-appointed, and not answerable to any constituency. These NGOs are the parasites who feed off natural and man-made disasters, mismanagement of the government, corruption, conflict, and strife (as in Pakistan and exclusively in Muslim countries) all contributed by their sponsors to impose their agenda. These NGO’s are the silent WMDs – Weapon of Mass Disruption - launched through social media for the sole purpose of disrupting a normal society or to increased chaos creating mass hysteria about every little negative happening. Irony is that these are the state media under the regulation of PEMRA a government monitoring authority confirming the strength of such NGOs. Mass protest in Turkey and Ukraine as shown and promoted on western media are other classical examples of the effectiveness of these WMD attacks on societies.NGOs wherever they exist also appear to have a contradictory role in politics of the host country. On one hand they criticize dictatorships and human rights violations. While on the other hand they compete with radical socio-political and religious groups, attempting to hi-jack popular movements.