United States Germany India United Kingdom Canada Romania Brazil Singapore Indonesia Italy France Mexico Poland Australia Netherlands Philippines Pakistan Malaysia Turkey Spain Hungary Russia Saudi Arabia Argentina Bulgaria Greece Belgium Czech Republic Switzerland Sweden Japan Egypt Thailand South Africa Serbia Chile Slovakia United Arab Emirates Ukraine Israel Finland Austria Portugal Norway Denmark Vietnam Lithuania Colombia Iran Croatia Sri Lanka South Korea Moldova Taiwan Peru Georgia Venezuela Bangladesh New Zealand Latvia Ireland Algeria Bosnia and Herzegovina Jordan Slovenia Iraq Albania Estonia Morocco Tunisia Kuwait Puerto Rico North Macedonia Qatar Trinidad and Tobago Ecuador Hong Kong Costa Rica Armenia Lebanon Guatemala Nepal Azerbaijan Cambodia Uruguay Mauritius China Dominican Republic Mongolia Iceland Bolivia Bahrain El Salvador Palestinian Territory Belarus Cyprus Ethiopia Jamaica Malta Maldives Luxembourg Syria Panama Brunei Darussalam Montenegro Kenya Myanmar Afghanistan Yemen Honduras Madagascar Paraguay Libya Nigeria Nicaragua Oman Laos Ghana Reunion Kazakhstan Bahamas Uzbekistan Sudan Martinique New Caledonia Barbados Aruba Netherlands Antilles Guadeloupe Macao Angola Namibia Haiti Guam Botswana Guyana Suriname Isle of Man Fiji Greenland Kyrgyzstan Zambia Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Senegal Tajikistan Cayman Islands Tanzania Uganda Guernsey Mozambique Cuba Faroe Islands Bhutan Belize Rwanda Jersey Zimbabwe French Guiana Gibraltar Cote D'Ivoire Cameroon Aland Islands French Polynesia Andorra Democratic Republic of the Congo Bermuda Antigua and Barbuda Grenada Papua New Guinea Northern Mariana Islands British Virgin Islands French Southern and Antarctic Lands Mali Niger Republic of the Congo Solomon Islands Liechtenstein U.S. Virgin Islands San Marino Djibouti Burundi American Samoa Eswatini Lesotho Saint Helena Monaco Tonga Seychelles Saint Lucia Samoa Cabo Verde Malawi Liberia Aruba Flag Meaning & Details 8 VISITORS FROM HERE! Aruba Flag Flag Information blue, with two narrow, horizontal, yellow stripes across the lower portion and a red, four-pointed star outlined in white in the upper hoist-side corner the star represents Aruba and its red soil and white beaches, its four points the four major languages (Papiamento, Dutch, Spanish, English) as well as the four points of a compass, to indicate that its inhabitants come from all over the world the blue symbolizes Caribbean waters and skies the stripes represent the island's two main "industries": the flow of tourists to the sun-drenched beaches and the flow of minerals from the earth
Learn more about Aruba »
Source: CIA - The World Factbook