Your list is a list of the 11 countries that received rocks for scientific research.
Below is a list of the countries that got a piece of the "Goodwill" rock. These pieces are inside a plexiglass form, and hence aren't directly accessible for research. I saw a moon rock in the NEtherlands, and IIRC that was inside a prism instead of the cylinder like the goodwill plate of Honudras shows. ANy info on that?
Here's the "goodwill" rock samples list as presented by NASA:
Note that the USSR is listed
No. Country Notes
291 China
294 Afghanistan
295 Argentina on display at the Galileo Galilei Planetarium (unconfirmed)
296 Australia part of the traveling exhibit "To Mars and Beyond" at the National Museum in Canberra (it will move to Melbourne next)
297 Austria on display in the Meteorite Hall at the Naural History Museum in Vienna
298 Bahamas
299 Bahrain
300 Barbados
301 Belgium
302 Bolivia
303 Brazil
304 Canada in storage at the Museum of Nature in Aylmer, Quebec
305 Chad
306 Taiwan
307 Colombia
308 Costa Rica
309 Dahomey
310 Denmark
311 Dominican Republic
312 Ecuador
313 Egypt
314 Congo Republic
315 El Salvador
316 Finland on display at the Mineralogical Museum of the Geological Survey of Finland (GTK) in Otaniemi, Espoo
317 Gabon
318 W. Germany
319 Solomon Islands
320 Guatemala
321 Guyana on display at the Guyana Museum (unconfirmed)
322 Haiti
323 Honduras purchased illegimately in Honduras for $50,000 and a truck and then smuggled into the United States in 1995; offered for sale for $5 million to undercover agents and then confiscated in 1998; returned to Honduras and now on display in Tegucigalpa at Centro Interactivo Chiminike
324 Iceland
325 India
326 Indonesia
327 Iran
328 Ireland on display at the National History Museum in Dublin
329 Israel
330 Italy
331 Ivory Coast
332 Jamaica
333 Japan
334 Jordan
335 Khmer
336 Korea
337 Lebanon
338 Liberia
339 Luxemborg
340 Malta was reported stolen in May 2004 from the National Museum of Natural History in Mdina
341 Mexico
342 Netherlands
343 New Zealand
344 Nicaragua
345 Niger
346 Nigeria
347 Norway
348 Pakistan
349 Panama
350 Paraguay
351 Peru
352 Philippines
353 Portugal
354 Qatar
355 Saudi Arabia
356 South Africa on display at the Transvaal Museum in Pretoria
357 Spain
358 Swaziland
359 Switzerland
360 Tanzania
361 Thailand
362 Togo
363 Tunisia
364 Turkey
365 United Kingdom
366 Uruguay
367 Venezuela
368 VietNam
369 Zambia
370 Algeria
371 Bhutan
372 Botswana
373 Bulgaria
374 Burma
375 Cameroon
376 Central African
377 Mozambique
378 Cyprus
379 Czechoslova
380 Guinea Equa
381 Ethiopia
382 Fiji
383 France
384 Gambia
385 Ghana
386 Guinea Republic
387 Hungary
388 Kenya
389 Kuwait
390 Laos on display at the Royal Palace National Museum
391 Lesotho
392 Libya
393 Malagasy
394 Malawi
395 Malaysia
396 Maldives
397 Mali
398 Mauritania
399 Mauritius
400 Morocco
401 Nepal
402 Oman
403 Poland
404 Romania may have been auctioned among possessions of late dictator Ceausescu
405 Rwanda
406 Senegal
407 Sierra Leone
408 Singapore on long-term loan to the Science Centre as part of the exhibit "Planetary Landscapes"
409 Somali
410 Sri Lanka
411 Sudan
412 Trinidad Tobago
413 USSR
414 United Arab Emirates on display at the Al Ain Museum (unconfirmed)
415 Upper Volta
416 Yemen
417 Yugoslavia
418 Zaire
420 Bangladesh
421 Liechtenstein
422 Monaco
423 Neuru
424 San Marino
425 Tonga
426 Vatican on display at St. Peter's Basilica (unconfirmed)
427 West Samoa
428 Chile
429 Sweden on display at Sweden's Observatory Museum
So all these coutries have the potential to reasearch a moon rock sample (though that was NOT the intention of those samples!)