Malaysia United States India China Indonesia Philippines Pakistan Singapore Turkey United Kingdom Nigeria Australia Iran Saudi Arabia Egypt Canada Brazil Thailand South Africa South Korea Vietnam Bangladesh Germany Japan Taiwan Hong Kong Mexico Italy Ethiopia Ghana Spain France Israel Iraq Nepal Netherlands New Zealand Kenya Sri Lanka Ireland Colombia United Arab Emirates Russia Poland Romania Portugal Greece Peru Uganda Belgium Jordan Myanmar Brunei Darussalam Sweden Oman Somalia Slovenia Chile Ecuador Switzerland Algeria Denmark Palestinian Territory Lebanon Qatar Afghanistan Tanzania Austria Czech Republic Libya Croatia Cameroon Zambia Finland Kuwait Yemen Morocco Hungary Norway Lithuania Sudan Argentina Bulgaria Puerto Rico Mauritius Cambodia Latvia Maldives Ukraine Malawi Slovakia Bahrain Uzbekistan Trinidad and Tobago North Macedonia Tunisia Mongolia Jamaica Serbia Bosnia and Herzegovina Venezuela Syria Cyprus Rwanda Namibia Macao Guyana Malta Kazakhstan Dominican Republic Moldova Fiji Zimbabwe Estonia Costa Rica Azerbaijan Georgia Belize Papua New Guinea Kyrgyzstan Iceland Botswana Mozambique Albania Bhutan Panama Laos Benin Barbados South Sudan Bolivia Belarus Sierra Leone Kosovo Cote D'Ivoire Guatemala Armenia Burkina Faso Guinea Gambia Nicaragua Madagascar Reunion Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Montenegro Senegal Honduras El Salvador Liberia Paraguay Democratic Republic of the Congo Seychelles Luxembourg Saint Lucia Cuba Mali Tonga Greenland Djibouti Vanuatu Central African Republic Saint Kitts and Nevis Guadeloupe Cabo Verde Republic of the Congo Jersey Niger Guam Togo Gabon Turks and Caicos Islands French Guiana Saint Martin Caribbean Netherlands Bermuda Lesotho Martinique Equatorial Guinea Samoa Eritrea Guernsey Uruguay French Polynesia Solomon Islands Burundi Flag Meaning & Details NO VISITORS FROM HERE YET! Burundi Flag Flag Information divided by a white diagonal cross into red panels (top and bottom) and green panels (hoist side and fly side) with a white disk superimposed at the center bearing three red six-pointed stars outlined in green arranged in a triangular design (one star above, two stars below) green symbolizes hope and optimism, white purity and peace, and red the blood shed in the struggle for independence the three stars in the disk represent the three major ethnic groups: Hutu, Twa, Tutsi, as well as the three elements in the national motto: unity, work, progress
Source: CIA - The World Factbook