Reuters
Three British nationals were killed in the Lisbon funicular crash, Portuguese police have said.
The Glória funicular, a popular tourist attraction, derailed and crashed into a building on Wednesday, killing 16.
More than 20 people were also injured, with five in a critical condition.
Nationals of Portugal, South Korea, Switzerland, Canada, Ukraine, France, and the US are also among the dead, police said.
No further details about the three UK nationals have been released by authorities.
It is not known what caused the crash. The capital's public transport operator, Carris, said all funiculars would be inspected and that it had launched an independent investigation.
The 140-year-old carriage derailed at around 18:15 local time (17:15 GMT) near the city's Avenida da Liberdade boulevard.
More than 60 rescue personnel raced to the scene to pull people from the wreckage.
Videos and images of the site showed an overturned, crumpled yellow carriage lying on the cobblestone street.
Portugal's Prime Minister Luís Montenegro called the crash "one of the biggest human tragedies of our recent history" and a national day of mourning was declared.
Officials initially put the death toll at 17 but the number was revised down to 16.
A German citizen was believed to be among the dead but was later discovered to have been in hospital overnight.
'I'll never take the funicular again': Witness on moment of the crash
Carris said in a statement that it had complied with "all maintenance protocols".
It said that general maintenance took place every four years and was last carried out in 2022.
"Everything was scrupulously respected," company head Pedro Bogas said, adding that maintenance of the funiculars had been carried out by a contractor for the past 14 years.
A funicular is a type of railway system that allows travel up and down steep slopes. In Lisbon, they are a crucial means of navigating the city's steep, cobbled streets.
The city's funicular railways - Glória, Lavra, Bica and Graça - are a popular tourist attraction, as the bright yellow tram-like vehicles snake through the hilly streets.
Glória was opened in 1885 and electrified three decades later.