Bangladesh United States United Kingdom Saudi Arabia Canada Australia United Arab Emirates India Iceland Japan Italy Singapore Sweden Germany Malaysia Taiwan Norway Belgium France Kuwait South Korea China Qatar Finland Ireland Spain Netherlands Bahrain Russia Oman Hong Kong Switzerland Thailand Greece Denmark Philippines Austria Cyprus New Zealand Poland Maldives Pakistan Cote D'Ivoire South Africa Portugal Turkey Sri Lanka Indonesia Iran Nigeria Afghanistan Sudan Brazil Mexico Kenya Vietnam Egypt Libya Ukraine Jordan Haiti Iraq Romania Brunei Darussalam Bulgaria Czech Republic Lebanon Nepal Morocco Myanmar Democratic Republic of the Congo Ghana Angola Botswana Tanzania Israel Colombia Liberia Hungary Senegal Bhutan Algeria Slovakia Gambia Argentina Uganda Serbia Luxembourg Georgia Azerbaijan Yemen Mozambique Estonia Eswatini Fiji Venezuela Dominican Republic Namibia Cambodia Kazakhstan Croatia Chile Lithuania Northern Mariana Islands Peru Ethiopia Honduras Mauritius Guam Rwanda Malta Tunisia Puerto Rico British Virgin Islands Ecuador Uzbekistan El Salvador Macao Paraguay Laos Cameroon Bermuda Latvia Lesotho Slovenia Timor-Leste Tajikistan Palau Syria Trinidad and Tobago Armenia Mongolia Papua New Guinea Jamaica Sierra Leone Bolivia Moldova North Macedonia Guyana Monaco Palestinian Territory Cook Islands Bahamas Mauritania Albania Aruba Zambia Mali New Caledonia Benin Burkina Faso Nicaragua Malawi Madagascar Panama Seychelles Cayman Islands Guatemala Belarus Gabon Djibouti Turkmenistan Jersey Barbados Costa Rica Saint Kitts and Nevis Kyrgyzstan Bosnia and Herzegovina United States Minor Outlying Islands Reunion Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Isle of Man Guernsey Netherlands Antilles Montenegro Gibraltar Dominica Vanuatu Uruguay Marshall Islands Republic of the Congo Saint Lucia Somalia Martinique Aland Islands Flag Meaning & Details NO VISITORS FROM HERE YET! Aland Islands Flag Flag Information The flag is the Swedish flag defaced by a red cross symbolising Finland. (Today, blue and white are considered the Finnish colours, but in the early days of Finnish nationalism, red and yellow from the Finnish coat of arms were also an option.)
Source: CIA - The World Factbook