United States Singapore Australia United Kingdom Canada Germany France India South Korea Spain Finland Netherlands Sweden Russia New Zealand Mexico Japan Brazil Israel Italy Hong Kong Philippines Taiwan Poland Czech Republic Ireland Norway South Africa Austria Switzerland Belgium Denmark Pakistan Colombia Malaysia China Thailand Portugal Romania Indonesia Bangladesh Argentina Hungary United Arab Emirates Myanmar Ukraine Egypt Kuwait Chile Turkey Greece Ecuador Serbia Peru Vietnam Bulgaria Puerto Rico Sri Lanka Slovakia Venezuela Saudi Arabia Morocco Slovenia Lebanon Estonia Macao Croatia Kenya Solomon Islands Cambodia Qatar Lithuania Iceland Mauritius Bahrain Costa Rica Luxembourg Ethiopia Bosnia and Herzegovina Dominican Republic Nigeria Honduras Oman Jamaica Kazakhstan Iraq Azerbaijan Tunisia North Macedonia Trinidad and Tobago El Salvador Uruguay Guernsey Bolivia Kyrgyzstan Albania Cyprus Latvia Algeria Jordan Georgia Uganda Bahamas Zimbabwe Panama Belarus New Caledonia Guam Mongolia Nepal Libya Papua New Guinea Barbados Guatemala Malta Gambia Saint Lucia Bermuda Jersey Madagascar Togo Zambia Cote D'Ivoire Senegal Cuba Haiti Monaco Nicaragua Belize Tanzania Rwanda Fiji Sierra Leone Guyana Maldives Sudan Cayman Islands Ghana Suriname Malawi Liberia Cameroon Vanuatu Brunei Darussalam Reunion Northern Mariana Islands Somalia Uzbekistan Antigua and Barbuda Botswana Falkland Islands U.S. Virgin Islands Faroe Islands Marshall Islands Yemen Paraguay Djibouti Gibraltar Laos Turks and Caicos Islands Namibia Armenia Guadeloupe Seychelles Flag Meaning & Details NO VISITORS FROM HERE YET! Seychelles Flag Flag Information five oblique bands of blue (hoist side), yellow, red, white, and green (bottom) radiating from the bottom of the hoist side the oblique bands are meant to symbolize a dynamic new country moving into the future blue represents sky and sea, yellow the sun giving light and life, red the peoples' determination to work for the future in unity and love, white social justice and harmony, and green the land and natural environment
Source: CIA - The World Factbook