United States United Kingdom Canada Germany Australia France Brazil India Italy Netherlands Japan Russia Spain Mexico Sweden Ukraine South Korea Romania Turkey Taiwan China Ireland Norway Denmark Finland Belgium Poland Colombia Thailand Singapore Philippines Malaysia Switzerland Indonesia Chile Argentina Portugal Vietnam New Zealand Egypt Hong Kong South Africa Israel Austria Bulgaria Czech Republic Greece Peru Iran Pakistan Hungary Kazakhstan Bangladesh Morocco Serbia Ecuador Iraq Croatia Belarus Venezuela Sri Lanka Lithuania Algeria Saudi Arabia Puerto Rico Jordan Georgia Slovenia Guam United Arab Emirates Cambodia Tunisia Slovakia Nigeria Armenia Estonia Costa Rica Luxembourg Kenya Lebanon Nepal Kyrgyzstan Uruguay Albania Latvia Dominican Republic Cyprus Azerbaijan Brunei Darussalam Moldova Bosnia and Herzegovina Guernsey Panama Iceland North Macedonia Mauritius Malta Ghana Qatar Myanmar Guatemala Isle of Man Mongolia Palestinian Territory Antigua and Barbuda Jamaica Bolivia Uganda El Salvador Paraguay Jersey Nicaragua Trinidad and Tobago Mozambique Syria Zimbabwe Reunion Angola Kuwait Martinique Gibraltar Macao Yemen Uzbekistan Monaco Honduras U.S. Virgin Islands Bahrain Suriname Andorra Tonga Curacao Aruba Montenegro Barbados Sudan Tanzania Afghanistan Tajikistan Rwanda Namibia Cameroon Cayman Islands Gabon Northern Mariana Islands Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Sierra Leone South Sudan Ethiopia Seychelles New Caledonia Kosovo Oman Bhutan Niger Senegal Mauritania Cote D'Ivoire Burkina Faso Sint Maarten Maldives Haiti French Polynesia Benin Faroe Islands Belize Bahamas Zambia Flag Meaning & Details NO VISITORS FROM HERE YET! Zambia Flag Flag Information green field with a panel of three vertical bands of red (hoist side), black, and orange below a soaring orange eagle, on the outer edge of the flag green stands for the country's natural resources and vegetation, red symbolizes the struggle for freedom, black the people of Zambia, and orange the country's mineral wealth the eagle represents the people's ability to rise above the nation's problems
Source: CIA - The World Factbook