El Salvador Mexico United States Argentina Spain Colombia Peru Chile Singapore Guatemala Venezuela Ecuador Honduras Bolivia Costa Rica France Canada Germany China Dominican Republic Brazil Uruguay Puerto Rico Nicaragua Panama Paraguay Italy United Kingdom Switzerland Russia Hong Kong Cuba Ireland Sweden Australia Netherlands Portugal Japan Finland Belgium India Poland Austria Romania Morocco Turkey Czech Republic Israel Greece Malaysia Indonesia Philippines Ukraine Denmark South Korea Norway Hungary Serbia Thailand Taiwan Slovakia Andorra South Africa Luxembourg Vietnam New Zealand Egypt Bulgaria Kazakhstan Algeria Croatia Saudi Arabia Pakistan Nigeria Lithuania United Arab Emirates Belize Tunisia Aruba Angola Iran Seychelles Curacao Haiti Georgia Jordan Bosnia and Herzegovina Cyprus Albania Slovenia Trinidad and Tobago Iraq Moldova Democratic Republic of the Congo Bangladesh Malta Mali Palestinian Territory Qatar Belarus Azerbaijan Iceland Estonia Lebanon Jamaica North Macedonia Netherlands Antilles Senegal Cote D'Ivoire Equatorial Guinea Latvia Reunion Armenia Mongolia French Guiana Cayman Islands Sri Lanka Kenya Guadeloupe Gibraltar Gabon Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Montenegro Monaco Madagascar Mauritius Burkina Faso Ghana Fiji New Caledonia Benin Kuwait Guyana Mozambique Martinique Togo Zimbabwe Oman Bahamas Syria Laos Uganda Solomon Islands Cambodia Nepal Mayotte U.S. Virgin Islands Liberia Faroe Islands Cabo Verde Cameroon Ethiopia Timor-Leste Maldives Lesotho Grenada Myanmar Tanzania Uzbekistan Sudan Bermuda French Polynesia Saint Pierre and Miquelon Mauritania San Marino Antigua and Barbuda Botswana Qatar Flag Meaning & Details 6 VISITORS FROM HERE! Qatar Flag Flag Information maroon with a broad white serrated band (nine white points) on the hoist side maroon represents the blood shed in Qatari wars, white stands for peace the nine-pointed serrated edge signifies Qatar as the ninth member of the "reconciled emirates" in the wake of the Qatari-British treaty of 1916 note: the other eight emirates are the seven that compose the UAE and Bahrain according to some sources, the dominant color was formerly red, but this darkened to maroon upon exposure to the sun and the new shade was eventually adopted
Learn more about Qatar »
Source: CIA - The World Factbook