United States Singapore Philippines China Canada Colombia Brazil United Kingdom Mexico Germany Netherlands Australia France South Africa India Ireland Peru Russia Italy Portugal Israel Honduras Hong Kong South Korea Indonesia Spain Ecuador Japan Argentina Cayman Islands Puerto Rico Romania Kenya Sweden New Zealand Chile Guatemala Malaysia Belgium Venezuela Norway Switzerland Finland Trinidad and Tobago Poland Costa Rica Nigeria Ukraine Aruba Denmark United Arab Emirates Croatia Czech Republic Jamaica Pakistan Dominican Republic Panama Greece Saudi Arabia Austria Ghana Sri Lanka Uganda Turkey Bulgaria El Salvador Thailand Egypt Taiwan Bolivia Hungary Paraguay Bangladesh Serbia Albania Malta Kazakhstan Algeria Papua New Guinea Liberia Nicaragua Reunion Morocco Barbados Bahamas Estonia Nepal Cote D'Ivoire Namibia Madagascar Suriname Qatar Bosnia and Herzegovina Uruguay Vietnam Mauritius Ethiopia North Macedonia Latvia Angola Uzbekistan Zambia Cameroon Slovakia Kuwait Tunisia Slovenia Cyprus Iran Lebanon Iraq Zimbabwe Jersey Lithuania Senegal Curacao Seychelles Jordan Belize Palestinian Territory Mozambique Botswana Syria Saint Lucia Guadeloupe Belarus Isle of Man Benin Myanmar Mali Iceland Georgia Tanzania Brunei Darussalam Armenia Oman Guam Martinique Grenada Bermuda Luxembourg Guyana Lesotho Cambodia Sint Maarten Faroe Islands Haiti Montenegro Saint Barthelemy Moldova Antigua and Barbuda Kyrgyzstan Vanuatu Cuba Bahrain French Polynesia Somalia New Caledonia Libya Burundi Mayotte Rwanda French Guiana American Samoa Turks and Caicos Islands Mongolia Togo Democratic Republic of the Congo Fiji British Virgin Islands Timor-Leste Monaco Solomon Islands Azerbaijan Gibraltar Guinea-Bissau Central African Republic Saint Martin Cabo Verde Afghanistan Malawi Andorra Cook Islands Yemen U.S. Virgin Islands Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Burkina Faso Maldives Qatar Flag Meaning & Details 14 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