ARGENTINA said four of its nationals were missing.
AUSTRALIA said three of its nationals were confirmed dead. Another 69 who were in the vicinity of the World Trade Center at the time of the attacks were unaccounted for.
AUSTRIA said 40 of its nationals were missing, one of them a 25-year-old woman named only as Alexandra H who worked in a bank in the World Trade Centre.
BANGLADESH said at least 50 Bangladeshis were presumed killed in the carnage at the World Trade Centre, where many worked in restaurants and offices.
BELGIUM said only one of its nationals remains missing, a sharp drop from a previous toll issued on Friday that said 60 Belgians were still unaccounted for, including four who worked in the WTC.
BRAZIL said at least 55 of its nationals were missing.
BRITAIN said nearly 100 of its citizens were confirmed dead. Prime Minister Tony Blair said yesterday that the death toll of Britons, probably 200 to 300, would be the highest in any attack since the end of World War II.
CAMBODIA said it feared that some 20 of its nationals were missing.
CANADA said three of its nationals were confirmed dead and between 40 and 75 were still missing.
CHILE said three of its nationals were missing feared dead, although more than 250 have been reported missing by relatives.
CHINA said three Chinese nationals died and another was missing. A man and woman, both in their 60s, died aboard the plane that was sent into the Pentagon. A 41-year-old Chinese person was missing, and authorities were checking on a report that a fourth Chinese was not accounted for.
COLOMBIA's Red Cross said 295 people were reported missing. While 17 people worked in the twin towers, others may have been present in the area at the time. Two Colombians were aboard one of the four hijacked planes.
DENMARK's foreign ministry said five tourists were still unaccounted for.
DOMINICAN REPUBLIC said one citizen was found dead and seven are missing.
ECUADOR listed seven citizens as dead, including one who was a passenger on a hijacked airliner, and 20 missing.
EGYPT's ambassador to the United States said four Egyptians were feared dead.
EL SALVADOR said one of its citizens died on one of the four hijacked planes, and up to 100 others were missing.
FINLAND said its consulate in New York was trying to track down 17 nationals unaccounted for.
FRANCE said a small number of its nationals working in the World Trade Centre were unaccounted for. A foreign ministry spokesman said no French dead have yet been confirmed.
GERMANY said Monday 205 of its nationals were still missing after the attack, but a foreign ministry spokesman said the number of Germans killed was likely to be much higher. On Friday, the ministry said some 700 Germans were missing.
GHANA said "scores" of its nationals had worked in the World Trade Centre and not all had been accounted for. According to private radio, at least four Ghanaians, one a woman, have been reported missing by their families.
GUATEMALA said five of its citizens are missing.
HONG KONG said 19 people were missing.
HONDURAS said one of its nationals was killed at the trade centre, but added that it had information that up to 500 Hondurans and Salvadorans worked in the towers, although not necessarily at the time of the disaster.
INDONESIA said one of its citizens died on one of the four hijacked planes and another of its citizens was missing.
IRELAND said four Irish citizens had been confirmed dead, including a woman and her four-year-old daughter who perished aboard one of the jets that hit the World Trade Centre and a worker in one of the towers. More than 20 other Irish nationals were missing.
ISRAEL said two of its nationals died on board the doomed flights and two others who worked in the World Trade Centre were missing. In addition six people who were near the World Trade Centre when the attacks took place are unaccounted for.
ITALY said 10 Italian nationals have been reported missing, but the figure may change because a total of 49 people with Italian names are on a list of those unaccounted for.
JAPAN said two Japanese died on the hijacked planes and another 22 were missing, presumed dead. One confirmed victim was on one of the planes that crashed into the World Trade Centre, while another was on the plane that crashed in Pennsylvania.
The Tokyo Shimbun newspaper quoted a foreign ministry official as saying it appeared likely the final toll would be between 40 and 70, although it could go to 100 "in the worst case".
JORDAN said one of its nationals, who also had US citizenship, was believed to be in the World Trade Centre at the time of the attack.
KENYA was missing one national, a computer analyst who worked in the World Trade Centre, according to local media.
LEBANON said two of its nationals, including one of the suspected hijackers, are confirmed dead and four others are missing.
MALAYSIA said four of its nationals working in the World Trade Centre were missing.
MEXICO was missing 19 nationals in the attacks on the World Trade Centre, including a consular employee. The Mexican consul in New York, Salvador Beltran, said 150 Mexicans worked in the center, although media said hundreds more worked in the restaurants on the lower levels and in the immediate vicinity.
Tepayac, a network of Mexican community organisations, said as many as 500 Mexicans are feared dead in the collapsed towers.
THE NETHERLANDS said at least three citizens had died in the attacks.
NORWAY said one tourist is unaccounted for, but there was no indication he had been at the World Trade Centre.
PAKISTAN said one Pakistani has been confirmed dead in the attacks and 20 were still missing. Another 15 were injured, some seriously, after being pulled from the rubble. A government spokesman said around 650 Pakistani nationals worked in the World Trade Centre.
PARAGUAY said two of its citizens were missing.
PERU had one dead, a New York resident who worked in the World Trade Centre, according to local media, and Peruvian diplomats in the United States said another five Peruvians were missing.
THE PHILIPPINES said two Filipinos were confirmed dead and 115 were missing.
PORTUGAL said five Portuguese were believed to have died in the World Trade Centre.
RUSSIA said 117 of its nationals were missing, believed killed. The Russian embassy in Washington said it compiled its list on the basis of calls received from Russians unable to contact relatives or friends.
SOUTH AFRICA said at least one of its nationals was presumed dead: businessman Edmund Glazer, a 41-year-old immigrant to the United States who telephoned his wife from aboard the first aircraft flown into the World Trade Centre. Five South Africans are still unaccounted for.
SPAIN said it was without news of eight of its citizens. Only one, Silvia San Pio, was known to be in the World Trade Center at the time of the attack. The foreign affairs ministry said six of the missing, including San Pio, were living in New York and two were tourists.
SOUTH KOREA said 19 of its nationals were missing.
SWEDEN said one of its citizens, employed by a New York insurance firm, was missing.
SWITZERLAND said four of its citizens were killed: two on board one of the planes that smashed into the World Trade Centre, and two who were in the towers. Another two who were in the vicinity were missing.
THAILAND has said two Thais working for private companies at the World Trade Center are missing. Another 17 staff working for government agencies with offices in the buildings have been accounted for.
TURKEY said it was tracking 131 people still unaccounted for. A total of 326 Turks had been traced alive out of 457 reported missing. Around 500 Turks worked in the World Trade Center.
TAIWAN said nine Taiwanese were missing.
UKRAINE said one man was missing. He had likely been visiting the WTC for a job interview when the attacks occurred.
URUGUAY's former cycling champion Alberto Dominguez, 65, was on one of the flights that crashed into the twin towers.
VENEZUELA reported two men and a woman missing. They worked for Chase Manhattan Bank and Eurobrokers International.
ZIMBABWE's ambassador to the US was quoted as saying six Zimbabweans were missing and feared dead. Ambassador Simbi Mubako told the state-owned Herald newspaper that at least five Zimbabweans were known to have been working at the World Trade Center, while one worked in the Pentagon as an engineer.
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