Japan United States Taiwan China Thailand South Korea Australia Germany Canada United Kingdom Belgium Indonesia Singapore Philippines Vietnam Hong Kong France Malaysia New Zealand Italy Russia Brazil India Netherlands Mexico Spain Switzerland Norway Czech Republic Sweden Israel Finland Cambodia Turkey Austria United Arab Emirates Ireland Hungary Denmark Poland Bangladesh Greece Ukraine Saudi Arabia Myanmar Algeria Guam Kenya Argentina Qatar Kazakhstan Sri Lanka Trinidad and Tobago Chile Northern Mariana Islands Egypt South Africa Kuwait Portugal Slovakia Bolivia Peru Paraguay Venezuela Macao Colombia Iceland Mongolia Malta Uganda Laos Romania Nigeria Jamaica Honduras Pakistan Nepal Bulgaria Slovenia Guatemala Fiji Luxembourg Jordan Belize Gabon Senegal Bahrain Uzbekistan Kiribati Costa Rica Iraq Belarus Tanzania Monaco Ghana Serbia Ecuador Dominican Republic Afghanistan Croatia Oman Tunisia Morocco El Salvador Zambia Estonia Zimbabwe Panama Angola Latvia Lithuania Ethiopia Benin Rwanda Marshall Islands Brunei Darussalam Libya Iran New Caledonia Djibouti Suriname Armenia Cyprus Moldova Uruguay Sudan Botswana Georgia Kyrgyzstan Bhutan Azerbaijan Vanuatu Cameroon Haiti Maldives Burkina Faso Puerto Rico Malawi Turkmenistan French Polynesia Samoa Papua New Guinea Timor-Leste Namibia Barbados Syria Palestinian Territory Madagascar Nicaragua Cuba Micronesia Mauritius South Sudan Palau Cote D'Ivoire Tajikistan Democratic Republic of the Congo Mozambique Togo Lebanon Saint Kitts and Nevis Guinea U.S. Virgin Islands Saint Lucia Yemen Solomon Islands Andorra Cayman Islands British Indian Ocean Territory Seychelles North Macedonia Liechtenstein San Marino Guernsey Albania Bosnia and Herzegovina Republic of the Congo Jersey Gambia Grenada North Korea Reunion Burundi Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Netherlands Antilles Guadeloupe Niger Aruba Flag Meaning & Details NO VISITORS FROM HERE YET! Aruba Flag Flag Information blue, with two narrow, horizontal, yellow stripes across the lower portion and a red, four-pointed star outlined in white in the upper hoist-side corner the star represents Aruba and its red soil and white beaches, its four points the four major languages (Papiamento, Dutch, Spanish, English) as well as the four points of a compass, to indicate that its inhabitants come from all over the world the blue symbolizes Caribbean waters and skies the stripes represent the island's two main "industries": the flow of tourists to the sun-drenched beaches and the flow of minerals from the earth
Source: CIA - The World Factbook