United States Singapore Mexico Spain United Kingdom Germany Colombia Argentina Canada Italy Philippines India Chile France Australia Belgium Peru Greece Netherlands South Africa Brazil Venezuela Portugal Switzerland Austria Poland Ecuador Turkey Malaysia Russia Costa Rica Norway Thailand Indonesia Sweden Puerto Rico Romania Serbia Guatemala Croatia Uruguay Hong Kong El Salvador Denmark United Arab Emirates Pakistan Ireland Finland Israel Saudi Arabia Czech Republic New Zealand South Korea Taiwan Hungary Japan Bolivia Egypt Panama Dominican Republic Bulgaria Slovenia Slovakia Honduras Lithuania Cyprus North Macedonia Bosnia and Herzegovina Qatar Malta Ukraine Lebanon Paraguay Iceland Vietnam Sri Lanka Trinidad and Tobago Nicaragua China Albania Kuwait Algeria Jordan Estonia Georgia Bangladesh Luxembourg Latvia Tunisia Morocco Iran Montenegro Nepal Guam Jamaica Iraq Bahrain Cuba Brunei Darussalam Moldova Namibia Cambodia Armenia Azerbaijan Maldives Macao Mongolia Kenya Mauritius Belarus Andorra Oman Guyana Barbados Bahamas Nigeria Reunion Netherlands Antilles Guadeloupe Libya Uganda Bhutan Suriname Sudan Kazakhstan Yemen Aruba Ghana Laos Uzbekistan Isle of Man U.S. Virgin Islands Kyrgyzstan Botswana Myanmar Jersey Ethiopia Madagascar Guernsey Gibraltar New Caledonia Angola Zimbabwe Senegal Belize Afghanistan Grenada Palestinian Territory Tanzania San Marino Democratic Republic of the Congo Samoa Martinique Micronesia Syria Eswatini Cabo Verde Cote D'Ivoire Zambia Seychelles Bermuda French Polynesia British Virgin Islands Faroe Islands Northern Mariana Islands Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Dominica Saint Kitts and Nevis Tonga Antigua and Barbuda American Samoa Falkland Islands Liechtenstein Greenland Cayman Islands Tokelau Flag Meaning & Details NO VISITORS FROM HERE YET! Tokelau Flag Flag Information a yellow stylized Tokelauan canoe on a dark blue field sails toward the manu - the Southern Cross constellation of four, white, five-pointed stars at the hoist side the Southern Cross represents the role of Christianity in Tokelauan culture and, in conjunction with the canoe, symbolizes the country navigating into the future the color yellow indicates happiness and peace, and the blue field represents the ocean on which the community relies
Source: CIA - The World Factbook