Japan United States Australia Canada Germany United Kingdom France China Singapore Thailand Italy Taiwan New Zealand Switzerland Belgium Hong Kong Spain Netherlands South Korea Sweden Indonesia Finland India Malaysia Brazil Austria Pakistan Philippines Mexico Vietnam Israel Russia Ireland Norway Poland Denmark United Arab Emirates Argentina Cambodia Czech Republic Nepal Turkey Guam Hungary Peru Portugal Croatia Ecuador Saudi Arabia Kenya Myanmar South Africa Chile Romania Ukraine Fiji Luxembourg Reunion Qatar Greece Costa Rica Northern Mariana Islands Colombia Sri Lanka Bulgaria Paraguay Mongolia Morocco Malta Laos Jordan Serbia Estonia Bolivia Guatemala Latvia Bangladesh Slovakia Cote D'Ivoire Panama French Polynesia Zambia Uruguay Egypt Jamaica Cyprus Ghana Slovenia New Caledonia Cayman Islands Nigeria Macao Tunisia Bosnia and Herzegovina Kuwait Lithuania Kazakhstan Venezuela El Salvador Belarus Belize Azerbaijan Iceland Barbados Uganda Puerto Rico Botswana Martinique Oman Kyrgyzstan Sierra Leone Rwanda Mauritius Solomon Islands Dominican Republic Moldova Brunei Darussalam Papua New Guinea Iran Palau Micronesia Tanzania Palestinian Territory Trinidad and Tobago Georgia Honduras Cook Islands British Virgin Islands Gibraltar Ethiopia Cameroon Madagascar Zimbabwe North Macedonia Armenia Montenegro Malawi Burkina Faso Kosovo Sudan Senegal Timor-Leste U.S. Virgin Islands Andorra Albania Namibia Monaco Isle of Man Dominica Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Mozambique Uzbekistan Bahamas Bermuda Tonga Liechtenstein Cuba Marshall Islands Benin Nicaragua Saint Lucia Vanuatu Bhutan Eswatini Syria Bahrain 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