United States Canada United Kingdom India Australia Singapore Japan Germany Brazil Philippines South Korea France Russia Netherlands Malaysia Hong Kong Puerto Rico Spain Pakistan Italy Indonesia Thailand Ireland Taiwan Mexico Switzerland New Zealand Poland Argentina Finland Czech Republic Guam South Africa Belgium Serbia Sweden Norway Saudi Arabia Croatia Turkey United Arab Emirates Vietnam Israel Denmark Greece Romania Portugal Slovakia Austria Colombia Uganda Nigeria Bosnia and Herzegovina China Chile Bangladesh Hungary Egypt Qatar Ukraine Jamaica U.S. Virgin Islands Kenya Bermuda American Samoa Ghana Nepal Slovenia Peru Northern Mariana Islands Cameroon Lithuania Costa Rica Venezuela Cambodia Moldova Dominican Republic Bulgaria Estonia Kuwait Sri Lanka Trinidad and Tobago Iceland Albania Bahamas Morocco Jordan Honduras Mozambique Cyprus Cayman Islands Bahrain Barbados Azerbaijan Ecuador Oman Armenia Tunisia Myanmar Guatemala Panama Fiji Montenegro Latvia Iraq Micronesia Palau Georgia Luxembourg Nicaragua Angola Cote D'Ivoire North Macedonia Jersey Lebanon Afghanistan Bolivia Kazakhstan Brunei Darussalam Madagascar Guadeloupe Malta Rwanda Yemen Uruguay Zimbabwe Guyana Zambia Senegal Namibia Mongolia Algeria Botswana Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Eswatini Timor-Leste Macao Belarus Grenada Sint Maarten Burundi Saint Kitts and Nevis Palestinian Territory El Salvador Saint Lucia French Guiana Tanzania Mauritius Belize Ethiopia Haiti Sudan Mauritania Maldives Democratic Republic of the Congo New Caledonia Malawi Greenland Gibraltar Tajikistan Paraguay Burkina Faso Uzbekistan Laos Iran Vanuatu British Virgin Islands Nauru Flag Meaning & Details NO VISITORS FROM HERE YET! Nauru Flag Flag Information blue with a narrow, horizontal, gold stripe across the center and a large white 12-pointed star below the stripe on the hoist side blue stands for the Pacific Ocean, the star indicates the country's location in relation to the Equator (the gold stripe) and the 12 points symbolize the 12 original tribes of Nauru the star's white color represents phosphate, the basis of the island's wealth
Source: CIA - The World Factbook