Flag of Ivory Coast


The flag of Ivory Coast features three equal vertical bands of orange, white, and green. It is also the national emblem of the Republic of Ivory Coast. Its status as a national emblem affirms to Article 29 of the Constitution of Ivory Coast. The flag has the proportions of 3:2 and consists of three vertical bands of equal width.

Design and symbolism

In 1959, when the Ivorian Legislative Assembly was adopting the flag, Minister of State said:
In 1960, when the Legislative Assembly was drafting the constitution, Mamadou Coulibaly said:
wrote in 1964, "The flag unites the colors of the three great landscapes of the Ivory Coast: green forest, white lagoon and orange savanna."

Adoption

The 1958 referendum which replaced the French Fourth Republic with the Fifth Republic also replaced the French Union with a French Community, under which most colonies became "autonomous states", including Ivory Coast on 4 December 1958. The new status for the first time allowed the adoption of a distinctive flag in place of the French one. The French commissioner suggested a red-white-and-blue flag with stars, but the Ivorians wanted a greater departure from the flag of the former colonial power. The orange-white-and-green flag was adopted by law n°59-240, passed by the Ivorian Legislative Assembly on 3 December 1959, just before the first anniversary of autonomy.
Head of government Félix Houphouët-Boigny declared full independence from France on 7 August 1960 and the Legislative Assembly sat as a constituent assembly to draft a new constitution. Augustin Loubao proposed changing the orange stripe to red, to symbolise a willingness to shed blood to defend the new republic. Other legislators expressed strong opposition to any change, and the existing flag was retained in Article 1 of the constitution adopted on 3 December 1960. It was retained as Article 29 of the 2000 constitution and Article 48 of the 2016 constitution.

Colors

The three bands of the Ivorian tricolor must have the same width and the mast is always placed on the side of the orange band. Although all laws define the colors of the flag, they do not specify the shade. So the bright orange and green colors can be replaced with slightly darker tones, depending on the location and circumstances. The Album des pavillons nationaux et des marques distinctives, 2000 edition of the Hydrographic and Oceanographic Service of the Navy, indicates that the official colors of the Ivorian flag are orange 151 C and green 347 C.
ColorsPantoneRGBHexadecimalCMYK
Orange151 C255, 130, 0#FF82000, 54, 100, 0
WhiteN/A255, 255, 255#FFFFFF0, 0, 0, 0
Green347 C0, 154, 68#009A4492, 0, 97, 0

Similar flags

The Irish flag has a similar color layout to the Ivorian one, but with the green on the hoist side and a longer proportion. When Murielle Ahouré celebrated winning the 2018 world indoor 60-meter dash, in default of an Ivorian flag to wave she borrowed an Irish flag from a spectator and reversed it. Due to this similarity, in Northern Ireland, Ulster loyalists have sometimes desecrated the Ivorian flag, mistaking it for the Irish one. In some cases, Ivorian flags displayed in Northern Ireland have signs explicitly labelling them as such displayed nearby to avoid having them desecrated by Ulster loyalists mistaking them for Irish ones.
The flag of Niger, also adopted in 1959 when Niger and Ivory Coast were both members of the Conseil de l'Entente, is a horizontal tricolour of orange, white and green; as with the Ivorian flag, the orange and green are sometimes said to represent the arid north and the more fertile south respectively.