Réunion | |
Nickname: | Tricolore |
Imagetext: | Flag of France |
Use: | 111110 |
Proportion: | 2:3 |
Adoption: | 15 February 1794 |
Design: | A vertical tricolour of blue, white, and red. |
Imagetext2: | Unofficial flag used by several local authorities |
Nickname2: | Lö Mahavéli |
Adoption2: | 2003 |
Image3: | Flag of Réunion (regional).png |
Imagetext3: | Flag of the Regional Council of Réunion |
The flag of Réunion is the flag of the department of Réunion. The region uses the flag of France, the national flag of the country. Although the decentralization of France installed a number of flags of the metropolitan regions, Réunion does not have a separate official flag. However, the Regional Council of Réunion does have a flag.
The Vexillological Association of Réunion selected a flag in 2003. It depicts the volcano of la Fournaise, bedecked by gold sunbeams. It was designed in 1974 by Guy Pignolet with help of Jean Finck and Didier Finck who called it Lö Mahavéli but it really started to be promoted once the association chose it in 2003.[1] It does not have official recognition but since 2014, it is flying outside or on top of many public buildings, like at the town halls of Saint-Denis and Saint-Philippe, after several city councils have taken the decision to do so.[2] [3] The flag is included in many versions of emoji.[4]
The Regional Council of Réunion uses a flag depicting a stylized representation of the island with the text "Region Reunion". Variants also exist which add the words "Valorisons nos atouts" (Let's value our strengths) in French and five coloured squares to represent equality and diversity.[5] [6]
Independentists and nationalists of Réunion also have their flag (green, yellow, red), created in 1986.[7] Green symbolizes the marronage, yellow symbolizes the working class and red symbolizes the period of slavery and indentured labour imposed by the French, struck by a yellow star with five points.
Réunion is an island in the Indian Ocean, east of Madagascar and 175 kilometres (109 mi) southwest of Mauritius. It accounts for one of the regions of France. As of 2014, it had a population of 844,994. The island has been an overseas region of France since 1946.[8]