China United States Hong Kong Japan Taiwan Singapore Malaysia South Korea Russia Canada United Kingdom Germany Netherlands Vietnam Australia France Indonesia Macao Thailand Philippines India Italy Spain Cambodia Myanmar New Zealand Turkey United Arab Emirates Poland Romania Switzerland Kazakhstan Brazil Czech Republic Sweden Luxembourg Laos South Africa Austria Belgium Finland Ukraine Mexico Iraq Argentina Ireland Pakistan Nigeria Norway Saudi Arabia Portugal Egypt Nepal Hungary Chile Algeria Yemen Panama Seychelles Denmark Peru Bulgaria Bangladesh Belarus Israel Serbia Colombia Tanzania Sri Lanka Uzbekistan Latvia Guinea Brunei Darussalam Ecuador Democratic Republic of the Congo Azerbaijan Moldova Estonia Ethiopia Kenya Greece Croatia Oman Suriname Cyprus Slovakia Lithuania Morocco Qatar Bolivia Costa Rica Mongolia Kyrgyzstan Bosnia and Herzegovina Uganda Equatorial Guinea Republic of the Congo Slovenia Jordan Vanuatu Senegal Zambia Papua New Guinea Georgia Angola Ghana Guyana Venezuela Marshall Islands Cote D'Ivoire Mauritius Kuwait Iran Guatemala Albania Libya Lebanon El Salvador Iceland Jamaica North Macedonia Fiji Maldives Bahrain Gabon Cabo Verde Tunisia Honduras Tajikistan Paraguay Syria Dominican Republic Djibouti Timor-Leste Namibia Palestinian Territory Northern Mariana Islands Palau Mali Sierra Leone Malta Puerto Rico Guam Tonga Samoa Togo Grenada Nicaragua Cuba Botswana Bouvet Island Mozambique Uruguay Chad Isle of Man Trinidad and Tobago Madagascar Bhutan Belize Burundi Gibraltar Turkmenistan Kiribati Somalia Aruba Niger Montenegro Curacao Vatican City Eritrea Reunion Cameroon Sudan Kosovo Monaco Mauritania Martinique Eswatini South Sudan Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Solomon Islands Armenia Zimbabwe Nauru Greenland Afghanistan French Polynesia Flag Meaning & Details NO VISITORS FROM HERE YET! French Polynesia Flag Flag Information two red horizontal bands encase a wide white band in a 1:2:1 ratio centered on the white band is a disk with a blue and white wave pattern depicting the sea on the lower half and a gold and white ray pattern depicting the sun on the upper half a Polynesian canoe rides on the wave pattern the canoe has a crew of five represented by five stars that symbolize the five island groups red and white are traditional Polynesian colors note: identical to the red-white-red flag of Tahiti, the largest and most populous of the islands in French Polynesia, but which has no emblem in the white band the flag of France is used for official occasions
Source: CIA - The World Factbook