Pakistan’s growing diplomatic stature — marked recently by its shuttle diplomacy and a string of Islamabad talks aimed at easing tensions in the Middle East — is drawing attention both on the world stage and in everyday encounters, diplomats and travellers say.
A viral social‑media clip from Madrid this week captured that shift in tone.
سپین میں پاکستانی پاسپورٹ کی قدر! 🇵🇰🇪🇸 میڈرڈ ایئرپورٹ پر امیگریشن آفیسر نے بغیر کسی مہر کے صرف پاسپورٹ دیکھ کر کہا، “You are fine… پاکستان زندہ باد!”۔ پاکستانی پاسپورٹ کی بڑھتی ہوئی عزت دیکھ کر دل خوش ہوگیا۔ pic.twitter.com/bxxriWUzGL
— Taha (@Iam_Taha22) April 18, 2026
In a roughly 29‑second selfie video posted to X by user @Iam_Taha22, a Pakistani traveller films himself just after clearing immigration at Madrid‑Barajas Adolfo Suárez Airport.
With visible surprise and jubilation, he tells viewers he had seen many online posts about the “value” of the Pakistani passport; moments later an immigration officer reportedly opened his passport to the main page, said “You are fine,” gave no stamp and waved him through. The traveler’s upbeat report — posted immediately after he cleared immigration — underscores a sense of quietly growing respect for Pakistan’s diplomats and citizens abroad.
Diplomatic sources in Islamabad say the country’s recent mediation efforts in the Middle East have helped reshape perceptions. Pakistan has hosted high‑level Islamabad talks and carried out shuttle diplomacy between regional capitals, seeking de‑escalation and negotiated solutions to recent flareups. Officials point to behind‑the‑scenes convening power, longstanding ties across the region, and Islamabad’s reputation as a pragmatic interlocutor as reasons foreign partners are increasingly receptive to Pakistan’s initiatives.
Analysts note several practical effects of that rising profile.
Beyond formal diplomacy, they say, improved bilateral communications and heightened goodwill can translate into smoother consular interactions for ordinary travellers — a subtle but meaningful signal of changed climate when officials treat visitors with added professionalism and courtesy.
Reaction to the Madrid clip was swift online. Many Pakistani users celebrated the traveller’s account as a small but telling sign of the country’s improved standing, while others framed it as proof that diplomacy and nation‑building work can produce tangible, everyday benefits. Critics cautioned against reading too much into a single incident, but acknowledged the symbolic value of such moments for national morale.














