Japan United States Indonesia Singapore Thailand France Canada United Kingdom Germany Malaysia Philippines Hong Kong Taiwan Brazil South Korea Vietnam Australia Mexico China Belgium Italy Russia Finland Spain Netherlands Saudi Arabia Poland Peru India Hungary Chile Sweden New Zealand Argentina Turkey Norway Bolivia Switzerland Colombia United Arab Emirates Czech Republic Portugal Ukraine Austria Denmark Romania New Caledonia Egypt Ireland Brunei Darussalam Venezuela Pakistan Greece Slovakia Kuwait Macao Algeria Israel Bulgaria Ecuador South Africa Morocco Qatar Lithuania Tunisia Serbia Puerto Rico Croatia Costa Rica Myanmar Uruguay Cambodia Belarus Mongolia Oman Estonia Sri Lanka Panama Latvia Iraq Iran Laos El Salvador Guam Iceland Reunion Paraguay Slovenia Dominican Republic Georgia Jordan Honduras Bangladesh Guatemala Mauritius Kazakhstan Jamaica Bahrain Palestinian Territory Moldova Syria Azerbaijan Nepal Kenya Lebanon Martinique Bosnia and Herzegovina Albania Trinidad and Tobago Yemen Nigeria Nicaragua North Macedonia Cyprus Luxembourg Maldives Sudan Northern Mariana Islands Libya Armenia Afghanistan Malta Bermuda Barbados Ghana Montenegro Guernsey Saint Kitts and Nevis Uzbekistan Madagascar French Polynesia Isle of Man Cayman Islands Solomon Islands Ethiopia Guadeloupe Fiji Gibraltar Cuba Jersey Haiti British Virgin Islands Bhutan Gabon Suriname Belize Netherlands Antilles U.S. Virgin Islands Republic of the Congo French Guiana Dominica Liechtenstein Guyana Eswatini Senegal Togo Papua New Guinea Bahamas Angola Andorra Tajikistan Greenland Aland Islands Seychelles Cameroon 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