Romania Spain United States Mexico Singapore Moldova Germany Italy United Kingdom France Canada Greece Guatemala Colombia Ecuador Belgium Argentina Peru Russia Chile Brazil Netherlands Austria El Salvador Ireland Venezuela Honduras Portugal China Switzerland Bolivia Serbia Ukraine Cyprus Sweden Poland Czech Republic Norway Bulgaria Australia Hungary Japan Israel Costa Rica Denmark India Dominican Republic Nicaragua Panama Turkey North Macedonia Georgia Finland United Arab Emirates Egypt Indonesia Paraguay Philippines Uruguay South Korea Reunion Puerto Rico Thailand Slovakia South Africa Lebanon Bosnia and Herzegovina Croatia Iran Hong Kong Luxembourg Malaysia Saudi Arabia Nigeria New Zealand Morocco Albania Vietnam Montenegro Palestinian Territory Pakistan Slovenia Lithuania Algeria Iceland Belarus Latvia Cote D'Ivoire Qatar Taiwan Jordan Syria Kuwait Iraq Tunisia Kazakhstan Sri Lanka Malta Armenia Cuba Bangladesh Estonia Senegal Benin Ghana Azerbaijan Cambodia Afghanistan Andorra Oman Kenya Aruba Faroe Islands Belize Equatorial Guinea Uzbekistan Togo Jersey Libya Guernsey British Virgin Islands Kosovo Trinidad and Tobago Madagascar Curacao Guadeloupe Democratic Republic of the Congo Seychelles Gibraltar Haiti Mauritius Tanzania San Marino Monaco Nepal French Guiana Mongolia Gambia Bahamas Jamaica U.S. Virgin Islands Barbados Zimbabwe Guyana Liechtenstein Angola Ethiopia Guinea Bahrain Yemen Fiji Zambia Cameroon Myanmar Bermuda Botswana Kyrgyzstan Isle of Man Somalia Maldives Rwanda Dominica Northern Mariana Islands Mozambique Macao Sudan French Polynesia Vanuatu Papua New Guinea Saint Martin Vatican City Tajikistan Suriname Cayman Islands Martinique Mayotte Netherlands Antilles American Samoa Burkina Faso Grenada Tokelau Flag Meaning & Details NO VISITORS FROM HERE YET! Tokelau Flag Flag Information a yellow stylized Tokelauan canoe on a dark blue field sails toward the manu - the Southern Cross constellation of four, white, five-pointed stars at the hoist side the Southern Cross represents the role of Christianity in Tokelauan culture and, in conjunction with the canoe, symbolizes the country navigating into the future the color yellow indicates happiness and peace, and the blue field represents the ocean on which the community relies
Source: CIA - The World Factbook