Taiwan Hong Kong United States Malaysia Australia Macao Japan Canada United Kingdom Singapore China Germany Vietnam France New Zealand South Korea Thailand Philippines Netherlands Ireland Spain Brazil Italy Indonesia Switzerland Poland Sweden Russia Cambodia India Belgium Mexico Austria Hungary Czech Republic Denmark Finland Argentina South Africa United Arab Emirates Norway Portugal Turkey Myanmar Romania Paraguay Chile Colombia Qatar Israel Panama Ukraine Peru Saudi Arabia Laos Costa Rica Greece Dominican Republic Guam Belize Guatemala Honduras Ecuador Croatia Latvia Palau Nicaragua Estonia Bangladesh Malta Egypt Slovakia Brunei Darussalam Pakistan Venezuela Jordan Bulgaria Iceland Lithuania Kenya Belarus Maldives Algeria Serbia Kuwait Marshall Islands El Salvador Seychelles Nigeria Luxembourg Slovenia Kazakhstan Fiji Eswatini Oman Lesotho Iraq Northern Mariana Islands Georgia Albania Mongolia Tunisia Nepal Morocco Bosnia and Herzegovina Papua New Guinea Sri Lanka Namibia Bolivia Suriname Cyprus North Macedonia Trinidad and Tobago Cote D'Ivoire Kyrgyzstan Haiti Mauritius Ghana Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Puerto Rico Isle of Man Chad Armenia Palestinian Territory Uruguay Moldova Saint Kitts and Nevis Gabon French Polynesia Saint Lucia Madagascar Reunion Bahrain Tanzania Ethiopia Mozambique Lebanon Yemen Bermuda Bahamas Uzbekistan Angola Zambia Azerbaijan Malawi American Samoa Uganda Montenegro Jamaica Rwanda Botswana French Guiana Togo Mauritania U.S. Virgin Islands Grenada Barbados Tajikistan Iran Vanuatu Cameroon Aruba Gibraltar Benin Afghanistan Democratic Republic of the Congo Curacao Cayman Islands Libya Niger New Caledonia Sierra Leone French Southern and Antarctic Lands Sint Maarten Dominica Bhutan Solomon Islands Kiribati Zimbabwe Guyana Sao Tome and Principe Djibouti Anguilla Mayotte Qatar Flag Meaning & Details 67 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