Site hosted by Angelfire.com: Build your free website today!

Losses Around the World

These are only partial listings.
This page will be updated to include
every country's losses that we can learn of.


ARGENTINA - Five citizens were missing.

AUSTRALIA - Three citizens were confirmed dead; 69 more were missing.

BANGLADESH - At least 50 citizens, many employees in New York offices and restaurants, were missing.

BELGIUM - Sixty people, including four who worked in the Trade Center, were missing.

BRAZIL - Twenty-six nationals were missing.

BRITAIN - Nearly 100 Britons were confirmed dead.

CANADA - Three citizens were confirmed dead and 50 to 100 others were missing.

CHILE - Three nationals were feared dead and more than 250 were missing.

CHINA - Three Chinese died and a fourth was missing.

COLOMBIA - The Red Cross said 199 people were missing, including 17 who worked in the twin towers. Also, there were two Colombians on one of the doomed planes.

DENMARK - Approximately 20 nationals were missing.

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC - One citizen died and seven were missing.

ECUADOR - Thirty-seven citizens were missing.

EGYPT - One citizen was confirmed dead and at least three others were missing.

EL SALVADOR - One citizen was on one of the hijacked planes; 72 others were missing.

FRANCE - A small number of French citizens working in the Trade Center had not been found.

GERMANY - More than 700 people were listed as missing but the Foreign Ministry said far fewer probably were victims.

HONG KONG - A total of 17 nationals were missing, including a visitor, four people who worked in the city and 12 living there.

INDONESIA - One citizen was on one of the hijacked planes; another was missing.

IRELAND - Four Irish citizens were confirmed dead, including a person who worked in the Trade Center and a woman and her 4-year-old daughter who were on one of the jets.

ITALY - Fifty-seven Italians were missing.

JAPAN - Two citizens died on the hijacked planes; 22 in the towers were missing.

MALAYSIA - Seven nationals working in the Trade Center were missing.

MEXICO - The Mexican consul in New York said that, of its 150 citizens who worked in the Trade Center, 19 were missing.

PAKISTAN - Approximately 650 Pakistani nationals worked in the Trade Center; one was confirmed dead, a government spokesman said.

PARAGUAY - Obdulio Ruiz Diaz, an architect, was missing.

PERU - One citizen was reported dead; five were missing.

PHILIPPINES - Two Filipinos were confirmed dead; 115 were missing.

PORTUGAL - Five citizens were missing.

SOUTH AFRICA - Twenty-four South Africans were missing. Another, Edmund Glazer, a 41-year-old immigrant to the United States, telephoned his wife from the first jet that hit the towers, Pretoria said.

SOUTH KOREA - Nineteen nationals were missing.

SPAIN - Officials said they had not heard from nine residents but declined to describe them as officially missing.

SWEDEN - One citizen was missing.

SWITZERLAND - Four citizens were killed, two on board a plane and two inside the towers. Two more nationals were missing.

TAIWAN - Nine citizens were missing.

TURKEY - Approximately 500 Turks worked in the towers; 131 have not been found.

URUGUAY - A former cycling champion, Alberto Dominguez, 65, was on one of the planes.

VENEZUELA - Two men and a woman were missing.

ZIMBABWE - Six citizens were missing, five in the Trade Center and one in the Pentagon.

NEW YORK - The international shock over the attacks in the United States continued to reverberate Sunday as countries held out hope for their missing citizens.

Emergency workers at the site of the World Trade Center have recovered just a fraction of the more than 5,000 people first believed to be under the rubble, leaving distraught families around the world clinging to the very thin hope that their loved ones might yet be found alive.

In New York, as of December 10th, 2001 -
The death toll from the September 11 terrorist attacks
on the World Trade Center has been revised down to 3,050,
the New York Office of Emergency Management said Saturday.
The number of missing was put at 582, the number of confirmed dead was 487
and the number of death certificates issued was 1,981.
It was initially estimated that as many as 6,500 were killed
when two hijacked jetliners crashed into the twin towers.



Do you know of countries other than these
that have suffered losses in this tragedy?
e-Mail that information to us here.


Back to front Page, click here.


We may never know how many were lost . . . .



Back to Motivations click here.

Back to Visitor's Thoughts click here.

Back to Front Page click here.