China United States Taiwan Hong Kong Japan Canada Germany Singapore United Kingdom Australia France South Korea Netherlands Russia Malaysia India Brazil Macao Belgium Sweden Philippines Italy New Zealand Spain Finland Switzerland Thailand Vietnam Indonesia Ireland Cambodia Pakistan Denmark Lithuania Czech Republic Norway Austria Poland Saudi Arabia Turkey United Arab Emirates Mexico Portugal Ukraine Argentina Romania Israel Egypt South Africa Algeria Nigeria Iran Lebanon Greece Hungary Montenegro Colombia British Virgin Islands Venezuela Bangladesh Belarus Bulgaria Chile Qatar Serbia Peru Morocco Luxembourg Latvia Ecuador Jordan Slovenia Costa Rica Bahrain Kazakhstan Panama Myanmar Laos Sri Lanka Dominican Republic Uruguay Iceland Estonia Kenya Iraq Ethiopia Paraguay Tanzania Kuwait Moldova Guatemala Nepal Slovakia Yemen Palestinian Territory Cyprus Tunisia Cameroon Bosnia and Herzegovina Mongolia North Macedonia Oman Angola Albania Malta Nicaragua Syria Fiji Trinidad and Tobago Senegal Brunei Darussalam Azerbaijan Guyana Bolivia Guinea Djibouti Cuba Maldives Uzbekistan Uganda Mauritius Namibia Barbados Croatia Honduras Eswatini Zimbabwe Puerto Rico Afghanistan Malawi Aruba Cote D'Ivoire Democratic Republic of the Congo Belize Bhutan Haiti Kyrgyzstan Guam Madagascar Georgia Botswana Tajikistan Jamaica Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Curacao Lesotho Antigua and Barbuda San Marino Guadeloupe Burundi Cabo Verde Liberia Northern Mariana Islands Aland Islands Equatorial Guinea Mozambique Sudan Andorra Mauritania Mali Faroe Islands Ghana Saint Lucia Flag Meaning & Details NO VISITORS FROM HERE YET! Saint Lucia Flag Flag Information cerulean blue with a gold isosceles triangle below a black arrowhead the upper edges of the arrowhead have a white border the blue color represents the sky and sea, gold stands for sunshine and prosperity, and white and black the racial composition of the island (with the latter being dominant) the two major triangles invoke the twin Pitons (Gros Piton and Petit Piton), cone-shaped volcanic plugs that are a symbol of the island
Source: CIA - The World Factbook