United States Singapore Canada Germany United Kingdom Australia Philippines France India Brazil Spain Netherlands Belgium South Africa Russia Italy New Zealand South Korea Mexico Malaysia Japan Romania Thailand Poland United Arab Emirates Turkey Israel Indonesia Ireland Greece Hungary Switzerland Argentina Taiwan Czech Republic Hong Kong Portugal Ukraine Croatia Pakistan Bulgaria Puerto Rico Colombia Sweden Uruguay Austria Slovakia Saudi Arabia Denmark Slovenia Norway Vietnam Egypt Finland Peru Serbia Kuwait Chile China Qatar Lithuania Guernsey Estonia Latvia Lebanon U.S. Virgin Islands Costa Rica Luxembourg Ecuador Trinidad and Tobago Malta Guatemala Jordan Venezuela Panama Sri Lanka Guam Cyprus Belarus Iceland Jamaica Bahrain Kazakhstan Cambodia Barbados Bolivia Dominican Republic Honduras North Macedonia Albania Algeria Bosnia and Herzegovina Bahamas Isle of Man Ghana Belize Bermuda Oman Kyrgyzstan Moldova Kenya Tunisia Nepal Georgia Bangladesh Brunei Darussalam Morocco Mauritius Laos Malawi Mozambique Cayman Islands Antigua and Barbuda El Salvador Mongolia Tanzania Namibia Iraq Macao Nicaragua Uzbekistan Uganda Jersey Azerbaijan Netherlands Antilles Northern Mariana Islands Nigeria Reunion Zimbabwe Rwanda Myanmar Paraguay Armenia Maldives Yemen Ethiopia Curacao Bhutan Saint Kitts and Nevis Montenegro French Polynesia Palestinian Territory Cook Islands Martinique Mayotte Sint Maarten Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Madagascar Dominica Aruba Libya Seychelles Botswana Zambia Afghanistan American Samoa Gambia Kosovo Tonga Cote D'Ivoire Guadeloupe British Virgin Islands Vanuatu Senegal Somalia Caribbean Netherlands Fiji Republic of the Congo Benin Saint Lucia Haiti Gibraltar Guyana Mali Solomon Islands Andorra Iran 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