Indonesia Singapore United States Philippines Vietnam Malaysia Thailand China United Kingdom India Turkey Australia Iran Pakistan Ecuador Canada Saudi Arabia Japan Spain Hong Kong Germany Taiwan Netherlands Mexico Russia Algeria South Africa Colombia Cambodia Iraq Poland Egypt Libya Israel Ireland New Zealand South Korea Ethiopia Uzbekistan France Morocco Sri Lanka Greece Peru Nigeria Nepal Kenya Oman Kazakhstan Jordan Hungary Brazil Ghana United Arab Emirates Bangladesh Italy Costa Rica Chile Romania Myanmar Argentina Finland Lebanon Czech Republic Tunisia Palestinian Territory Albania Austria Lithuania Serbia Belgium Dominican Republic Tanzania Slovakia Ukraine Timor-Leste Switzerland Kuwait Guatemala Jamaica Panama Croatia Bulgaria Sweden Cyprus Norway El Salvador Portugal Yemen Rwanda Macao Venezuela Maldives Kosovo Moldova Brunei Darussalam Uganda Bahrain Denmark Laos Qatar Mongolia Bosnia and Herzegovina Puerto Rico Sudan Armenia Namibia Fiji Burkina Faso Nicaragua Estonia Azerbaijan Trinidad and Tobago Afghanistan Kyrgyzstan Botswana Cote D'Ivoire Honduras Benin Mozambique North Macedonia Malawi Latvia Bolivia Cameroon Syria Bhutan Paraguay Malta Eswatini Mauritius Zimbabwe Senegal Grenada Uruguay Somalia Democratic Republic of the Congo Northern Mariana Islands Cabo Verde Guyana Luxembourg French Polynesia Sierra Leone Kiribati Belarus Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Haiti Lesotho Republic of the Congo Barbados Belize Cayman Islands Suriname Jersey Cuba Saint Lucia Andorra Curacao Slovenia U.S. Virgin Islands Saint Kitts and Nevis Mauritania Tonga Reunion Montenegro Zambia Flag Meaning & Details NO VISITORS FROM HERE YET! Zambia Flag Flag Information green field with a panel of three vertical bands of red (hoist side), black, and orange below a soaring orange eagle, on the outer edge of the flag green stands for the country's natural resources and vegetation, red symbolizes the struggle for freedom, black the people of Zambia, and orange the country's mineral wealth the eagle represents the people's ability to rise above the nation's problems
Source: CIA - The World Factbook