Romania United States Germany Russia United Kingdom Turkey Canada France Netherlands Italy Spain Moldova Vietnam Brazil India Singapore Bulgaria Poland Hungary Ukraine Belgium Serbia Lithuania Portugal Pakistan Thailand Austria Albania Japan Czech Republic Finland Bangladesh Egypt Indonesia Argentina Algeria Sweden Colombia Denmark China Ireland Greece South Korea Mexico Australia Malaysia Morocco Dominican Republic Israel Iran Philippines Slovakia Croatia Saudi Arabia Switzerland Peru Bosnia and Herzegovina Tunisia North Macedonia United Arab Emirates Norway Cambodia Venezuela Cyprus Chile Ecuador Taiwan Belarus Latvia South Africa Nigeria Kazakhstan Nepal Georgia Slovenia Palestinian Territory Hong Kong Jordan Costa Rica Qatar Luxembourg Sri Lanka Montenegro Uruguay Trinidad and Tobago Estonia Uzbekistan Kenya Kosovo Azerbaijan Panama Malta Paraguay Jamaica New Zealand Mongolia Kuwait Laos Armenia Iceland Bolivia Honduras Barbados Macao Iraq Brunei Darussalam Guatemala Myanmar Puerto Rico Lebanon Seychelles Cameroon Mauritius Madagascar Oman Isle of Man Ghana Syria Kyrgyzstan French Southern and Antarctic Lands Bhutan Monaco Nicaragua Belize Ethiopia British Virgin Islands Saint Lucia Liechtenstein Bahamas Cote D'Ivoire Tanzania Andorra Reunion Bahrain El Salvador Maldives Mauritania Angola Antigua and Barbuda Saint Vincent and the Grenadines Senegal Tajikistan Yemen Namibia Jersey Curacao Libya Cuba French Guiana Faroe Islands Benin Mozambique Suriname Uganda Greenland Zambia Niger Marshall Islands Malawi Togo Dominica Guyana Republic of the Congo Sierra Leone Martinique Tuvalu South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands Rwanda Turkmenistan Afghanistan Guernsey Sudan French Polynesia Djibouti Qatar Flag Meaning & Details 106 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