France United States Canada Belgium Cote D'Ivoire Switzerland Reunion Cameroon Martinique Guadeloupe Italy Lebanon Germany United Kingdom Burkina Faso Madagascar Benin Senegal Mauritius Haiti Spain Algeria Democratic Republic of the Congo Morocco Tunisia Gabon Togo Brazil Netherlands French Polynesia Luxembourg New Caledonia Russia French Guiana Rwanda Poland Portugal South Africa Japan Republic of the Congo Mexico Romania Ireland Egypt Burundi Vietnam Austria Mali Greece Philippines Australia Argentina Israel Denmark India Sweden Czech Republic China Norway Finland Colombia Taiwan United Arab Emirates Thailand Guinea Chile Malaysia Monaco Chad South Korea Turkey Central African Republic Seychelles Croatia Kenya Peru Singapore Hungary Bulgaria Ukraine Hong Kong Lithuania Qatar Venezuela Indonesia Nigeria Dominican Republic Slovakia Ecuador Djibouti Mayotte Bosnia and Herzegovina Niger New Zealand Ghana Vatican City Malta Wallis and Futuna Serbia Vanuatu Slovenia Belarus Saint Martin Angola Palestinian Territory Saudi Arabia Mauritania Botswana Equatorial Guinea Guatemala Estonia Saint Pierre and Miquelon Syria Andorra Armenia Iraq Costa Rica Georgia Panama Cambodia Uganda Uruguay Albania El Salvador Nicaragua Latvia Jordan Zambia Sri Lanka Saint Barthelemy Jersey Zimbabwe Tanzania Bahrain Kuwait Ethiopia Caribbean Netherlands Malawi Cabo Verde Cyprus Moldova Gambia Brunei Darussalam Pakistan Trinidad and Tobago Bolivia Sudan Kyrgyzstan Turkmenistan Barbados Azerbaijan Jamaica Paraguay Bahamas Iran Kazakhstan British Virgin Islands Bangladesh Somalia Uzbekistan North Macedonia Maldives Oman Honduras Antigua and Barbuda Namibia Sierra Leone Afghanistan Iceland Libya Gibraltar Puerto Rico Curacao Laos Gabon Flag Meaning & Details 360 VISITORS FROM HERE! Gabon Flag Flag Information three equal horizontal bands of green (top), yellow, and blue green represents the country's forests and natural resources, gold represents the equator (which transects Gabon) as well as the sun, blue represents the sea
Learn more about Gabon »
Source: CIA - The World Factbook