Mexico United States Peru Colombia Singapore Chile Canada Spain Argentina Brazil Ecuador United Kingdom Bolivia Ireland India China France Guatemala Germany Poland Honduras Indonesia Netherlands El Salvador Costa Rica Philippines Australia Paraguay Italy Russia South Korea Uruguay Dominican Republic Panama Venezuela Nicaragua Turkey Hong Kong Switzerland Sweden Ukraine Japan South Africa Iran Belgium Portugal Thailand Malaysia Czech Republic Nigeria Romania Greece Vietnam Finland Taiwan Austria Puerto Rico Hungary Pakistan Egypt Israel Denmark Kenya Bangladesh Saudi Arabia Norway Iraq United Arab Emirates Serbia New Zealand Bosnia and Herzegovina Cuba Algeria Ethiopia Uzbekistan Bulgaria Sri Lanka Croatia Latvia Lithuania Jordan Belize Macao Albania Morocco Slovakia Kazakhstan Moldova Georgia Jamaica Nepal Slovenia North Macedonia Kuwait Mauritius Tanzania Palestinian Territory Tunisia Estonia Ghana Togo Cameroon Armenia Trinidad and Tobago Kosovo Myanmar Lebanon Azerbaijan Zimbabwe Malta Mongolia Luxembourg Cyprus Bahrain Uganda Belarus Senegal Tajikistan Qatar Faroe Islands Oman Namibia Afghanistan Barbados Kyrgyzstan Montenegro Somalia Cambodia Guam Guyana Benin Angola Zambia Suriname Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Libya Brunei Darussalam Aruba Burkina Faso Greenland Rwanda Iceland Bhutan Syria Sierra Leone Maldives Cote D'Ivoire South Sudan Botswana Mauritania Monaco Guadeloupe Reunion Bermuda Fiji Democratic Republic of the Congo Samoa Tonga Lesotho French Guiana Timor-Leste Bahamas Malawi U.S. Virgin Islands Jersey Curacao Gibraltar Cayman Islands Mozambique Guinea Liberia Laos Guernsey Flag Meaning & Details NO VISITORS FROM HERE YET! Guernsey Flag Flag Information white with the red cross of Saint George (patron saint of England) extending to the edges of the flag and a yellow equal-armed cross of William the Conqueror superimposed on the Saint George cross the red cross represents the old ties with England and the fact that Guernsey is a British Crown dependency the gold cross is a replica of the one used by Duke William of Normandy at the Battle of Hastings in 1066
Source: CIA - The World Factbook