Here’s the latest I can provide about Vanuatu’s flag based on commonly cited sources.
Answer: No major changes to Vanuatu’s national flag have been officially adopted recently. The flag remains the red-green bicolor with a black isosceles triangle at the hoist, featuring a yellow Y-shaped band and a boar tusk with two crossed leaves in gold.
Key context and symbolism (stable over recent decades):
- Design: Two horizontal bands of red (top) and green, separated by a black triangle at the hoist and a yellow pall (Y-shape) extending across the flag. A yellow boar tusk encircles two crossed namele leaves inside the triangle. This is the widely recognized flag adopted on 18 February 1980, ahead of independence in 1980 [Britannica-style summary of symbolism; Flag Oxford/encyclopedic entries].[3]
- Meaning: Red stands for the blood of national heroes and unity of people; green for the richness of the islands; black for the ni-Vanuatu people; yellow for the light of Christianity and peace; the yellow Y depicts the shape of the islands and the gospel’s reach. The boar tusk is a traditional symbol of prosperity and strength. These associations have been consistently described in major references since adoption [Flagpedia style overview; Britannica summary; CIA World Factbook context].[2][9][3]
- Adoption and history: The flag was officially adopted on 18 February 1980, as part of Vanuatu’s path to independence, with some historical flags and party emblems influencing the final design but no formal re-adoption of a new flag in recent years. Contemporary sources reiterate the 1980 adoption date and symbolism.[4][5][7]
If you’re looking for the very latest developments (for example, any parliamentary debates, proposed redesigns, or unofficial alternative designs circulating online), I can search for recent news updates and summarize them with citations. Would you like me to do that?
Sources
The flag of Vanuatu consists of two equal horizontal bands of red (top) and green with a black isosceles triangle (based on the hoist side) all separated by a black-edged yellow stripe in the shape of a horizontal Y (the two points of the Y face the hoist side and enclose the triangle); centred in the triangle is a boar's tusk encircling two crossed namele leaves, all in yellow. The Vanuatu chain of islands is in the shape of a Y, and the yellow horizontal Y on the flag is representative...
flags.fandom.comNational flag consisting of horizontal stripes of red and green separated by a black hoist triangle and a horizontal yellow Y-shape (known in heraldry as a pall) with black borders. On the triangle are two crossed leaves encircled by a pig’s tusk. The flag has a width-to-length ratio of 3 to 5.At
www.britannica.comThe national flag of Vanuatu was adopted on 18 February 1980.
www.wikiwand.comThe national flag of Vanuatu was adopted in 1980, the currency of the country is Vanuatu vatu, and its national anthem is Yumi, Yumi, Yumi.
www.worldatlas.comCurrent flag of Vanuatu with a history of the flag and information about Vanuatu country.
flagpedia.netThe flag of Vanuatu (Bislama: flaeg blong Vanuatu) was adopted on 18 February 1980. In 1977 a flag of almost the same colours and symbolism as the future national flag was designed by local artist Kalontas Malon and adopted by the Vanua'aku Pati. When the party led the New Hebrides to independence as Vanuatu in 1980, the colours of the party flag (red, green, black and yellow) were chosen to be the basis for the national flag on Independence Day, 30 July 1980. A parliamentary committee chose...
vexillology.fandom.com