MUMBAI - AT least 26 non-Indians have been killed in the attacks in the western Indian city of Mumbai, which have left 195 people dead and 295 injured, according to officials.
A breakdown of known fatalities by country:
Israel: Six Israelis who were taken hostage in a Jewish cultural centre have been killed, a diplomat at the Israeli embassy in India and a foreign ministry spokesman said.
Two others died in attacks elsewhere in the city.
None of the victims was formally identified, but the Chabad-Lubavitch community which runs the centre said Rabbi Gavriel Holtzberg, who was born in Israel and his wife, Rivka, had perished as Indian commandos moved in to end the siege.
United States: The State Department Friday said five US citizens had been killed in the attacks on Mumbai. Officials did not name the dead, but the Synchronicity Foundation, a Virginia-based meditation community said two of its members, father and daughter Alan and Naomi Scherr, had died.
It was not immediately clear if New York-based Rabbi Gavriel Holtzberg and his wife were counted among the five.
France: Two French nationals have been killed, Foreign Minister Bernard Kouchner said in a statement, without naming them. The president of the fashion lingerie company Princess Tam Tam said the two were its founder, Loumia Hiridjee, and her husband Mourad Amarsy.
Australia: Two Australians are known to have died in the attacks - Doug Markell, aged 71, and Brett Taylor, 49.
Canada: Two Canadians died in the attacks, one of whom was female, the country's foreign minister, Lawrence Cannon said. The names of the two have not been released.
Germany: A spokesman for the German foreign ministry said one national had been killed. He was not named, but a Munich-based media firm, CAMP TV, said the dead man was its co-owner, Ralph Burkei. An Indian security official has said three Germans died in the attacks.
Singapore: Lo Hwei Yen, 28, was killed after she was taken hostage in the Oberoi/Trident hotel, a diplomat said.
Britain: British-Cypriot businessman Andreas Liveras, a 73-year-old yachting tycoon, has been confirmed dead by the Foreign Office.
Japan: In Tokyo, Mitsui Marubeni Liquefied Gas announced that one of its Japanese employees, Hisashi Tsuda, aged 38, had been killed.
Italy: An Italian, Antonio de Lorenzo, died in the assault, the Italian foreign ministry said.
Thailand: A woman Thai worker died in the attacks on the Oberoi/Trident hotel, Thailand's foreign ministry said Saturday, adding that she had worked in the hotel's spa. A spokesman said five Thais were rescued.
Mauritius: Mauritian banker Shaitlall Gunness was found dead in the Taj Hotel, Prime Minister Navin Chandra Ramgoolam told AFP.
The executive director of the State Bank of Mauritius was on a business trip with his wife Amrita - she was in the hotel's business centre making a telephone call when the militants broke in and was able to take shelter. -- AFP