Indonesia Singapore United States Philippines Malaysia China United Kingdom India Vietnam Pakistan Turkey Iran Australia Russia Canada Germany South Africa Thailand Japan Hong Kong South Korea Netherlands Taiwan Egypt Saudi Arabia Spain Nigeria France Brazil Ireland Peru Colombia Ecuador Greece Kenya Italy Mexico Algeria Bangladesh Kazakhstan Sweden Poland Sri Lanka United Arab Emirates Timor-Leste Morocco Israel Oman New Zealand Finland Jordan Uzbekistan Iraq Austria Nepal Ghana Romania Lebanon Belgium Switzerland Hungary Portugal Chile Brunei Darussalam Ethiopia Cambodia Ukraine Argentina Norway Lithuania Tanzania Czech Republic Palestinian Territory Qatar Libya Mauritius Denmark Serbia Uganda Tunisia Slovakia Cyprus Myanmar Costa Rica Macao Croatia Slovenia Estonia Namibia Bulgaria Puerto Rico Bhutan Jamaica Panama Kuwait Latvia Kosovo Bahrain Zimbabwe Trinidad and Tobago Yemen Malta Malawi Botswana Eswatini Maldives Georgia Guyana Afghanistan Dominican Republic Venezuela Mongolia Rwanda Armenia Somalia Bosnia and Herzegovina Albania Fiji Togo Syria El Salvador Iceland Bolivia Belarus Benin Luxembourg Zambia Honduras North Macedonia Uruguay Azerbaijan Laos Mozambique Kyrgyzstan Guatemala Cameroon Saint Lucia Lesotho Cote D'Ivoire Madagascar Moldova Senegal Paraguay Angola Bahamas Papua New Guinea Burkina Faso Belize Nicaragua Cayman Islands Mauritania Montenegro Barbados American Samoa Sierra Leone Cuba Micronesia Guam Grenada Turks and Caicos Islands Gambia Isle of Man Curacao Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Burundi U.S. Virgin Islands Democratic Republic of the Congo Solomon Islands South Sudan Cabo Verde Antigua and Barbuda Mali Liberia Liechtenstein Gibraltar Vanuatu New Caledonia Chad Aruba Tonga Bermuda Suriname Sudan Andorra Djibouti Palau Anguilla Jersey Greenland Guadeloupe Monaco Dominica Tajikistan Haiti Marshall Islands Guinea Samoa 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