Japan United States Taiwan China Singapore Australia Canada United Kingdom Thailand Hong Kong Germany South Korea France Belgium Italy Vietnam Romania Philippines Indonesia Malaysia India Netherlands New Zealand Russia Switzerland Spain Brazil Sweden Mexico Austria Norway United Arab Emirates Finland Saudi Arabia Turkey Denmark Cambodia Ireland Poland Hungary Czech Republic Guam Ukraine Chile Israel Peru Bangladesh Argentina Qatar Laos Sri Lanka Macao Egypt Mongolia Algeria South Africa Colombia Greece Nepal Pakistan Portugal Northern Mariana Islands Ghana Myanmar Kenya Bulgaria Luxembourg Paraguay Dominican Republic Morocco Kazakhstan Panama Iran Saint Lucia Bolivia Fiji Jamaica Iceland Ecuador Malta Kuwait Martinique Ethiopia Croatia Venezuela Nigeria Serbia Tanzania Latvia Slovakia Trinidad and Tobago Madagascar Tunisia French Polynesia Marshall Islands Estonia Oman Bahrain Costa Rica Mozambique Maldives Jordan Haiti Senegal Guatemala Iraq Lebanon Lithuania Belarus Zambia Malawi Monaco Cuba Barbados New Caledonia Kyrgyzstan Benin Rwanda Uruguay Cameroon Burkina Faso Georgia Antigua and Barbuda Armenia Afghanistan Puerto Rico Uganda Brunei Darussalam Mauritania Cyprus Namibia El Salvador Sudan Honduras Curacao Bhutan Slovenia Bahamas Mali Syria Uzbekistan North Macedonia Nicaragua Cote D'Ivoire Micronesia U.S. Virgin Islands Bosnia and Herzegovina Solomon Islands Belize Zimbabwe Libya Democratic Republic of the Congo Djibouti Tonga Dominica Saint Kitts and Nevis Niger Albania Yemen Saint Barthelemy Saint Martin Aruba Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Montenegro Angola Jersey Timor-Leste Tajikistan Suriname Papua New Guinea Azerbaijan Liechtenstein Botswana Kiribati Palau Netherlands Antilles Vanuatu Wallis and Futuna Flag Meaning & Details NO VISITORS FROM HERE YET! Wallis and Futuna Flag Flag Information unofficial, local flag has a red field with four white isosceles triangles in the middle, representing the three native kings of the islands and the French administrator the apexes of the triangles are oriented inward and at right angles to each other the flag of France, outlined in white on two sides, is in the upper hoist quadrant note: the design is derived from an original red banner with a white cross pattee that was introduced in the 19th century by French missionaries the flag of France is used for official occasions
Source: CIA - The World Factbook