United States Singapore United Kingdom Philippines Canada China Australia India Nigeria Germany Italy Ireland Malaysia Ghana Netherlands Russia Brazil France Sri Lanka Japan Spain Belgium South Africa New Zealand Indonesia Hong Kong Trinidad and Tobago Poland South Korea Uganda Cameroon Mexico Kenya Portugal Hungary Czech Republic Taiwan Ukraine United Arab Emirates Vietnam Switzerland Malta Saint Lucia Tanzania Slovakia Romania Norway Lithuania Belize Austria Kuwait Sweden Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Thailand Barbados Brunei Darussalam Denmark Saudi Arabia Argentina Fiji Latvia Macao Rwanda Colombia Jamaica Guam Chile Grenada Dominica Turkey Croatia Bahrain Finland Qatar Myanmar Sierra Leone U.S. Virgin Islands Liberia Papua New Guinea Pakistan Oman Peru Israel Venezuela Bahamas Guatemala Isle of Man Gambia Slovenia Vatican City Uruguay Mauritius Malawi Guyana Guadeloupe Democratic Republic of the Congo Lebanon Zambia Greece Puerto Rico Ecuador Uzbekistan Madagascar Serbia Costa Rica Paraguay Cote D'Ivoire Egypt Antigua and Barbuda Dominican Republic Iraq Saint Martin Bolivia Zimbabwe Albania Iran Tonga Namibia Luxembourg Togo Bangladesh Cyprus Iceland Georgia Bulgaria Timor-Leste Mali Haiti Lesotho Saint Kitts and Nevis Aruba Sudan Cayman Islands Kazakhstan Guernsey Jersey Estonia Curacao Northern Mariana Islands Netherlands Antilles Ethiopia Belarus South Sudan Equatorial Guinea Moldova Chad Republic of the Congo Bermuda El Salvador Jordan Cook Islands Monaco Panama Anguilla Samoa Djibouti Niger Sint Maarten Seychelles Eswatini Gabon Senegal Armenia Bosnia and Herzegovina French Guiana Vanuatu Cambodia Botswana Nepal Laos Qatar Flag Meaning & Details 13 VISITORS FROM HERE! Qatar Flag Flag Information maroon with a broad white serrated band (nine white points) on the hoist side maroon represents the blood shed in Qatari wars, white stands for peace the nine-pointed serrated edge signifies Qatar as the ninth member of the "reconciled emirates" in the wake of the Qatari-British treaty of 1916 note: the other eight emirates are the seven that compose the UAE and Bahrain according to some sources, the dominant color was formerly red, but this darkened to maroon upon exposure to the sun and the new shade was eventually adopted
Learn more about Qatar »
Source: CIA - The World Factbook