Update....
The attackersHere is what we know so far about the seven terrorists who died – and other suspects who might be connected to the attacks:
The Bataclan attackersThree attackers are known to have died when French security forces raided the concert venue: two by detonating suicide belts and one who police said was shot by their officers.
One of the suicide bombers was Omar Ismaïl Mostefai, identified byprints taken from a severed finger. You can read more on Mostefai here.
The identity of his two accomplices is not yet known.
Boulevard Voltaire attackerIbrahim Abdeslam, also reported as Brahim Abdeslam, 31, one of three brothers believed to be involved, was identified by prosecutors as the man who rented a Seat car used in the attacks. He detonated his explosive vest at the Comptoir Voltaire cafe, seriously injuring a bystander and killing himself.
The Stade de France attackersThree suicide attackers died at this site by detonating explosive vests. One was Bilal Hadfi, aged 19 or 20, who lived in Belgium.
A Syrian passport for a 25-year-old called Ahmed Almohamed was found here. It was registered by a refugee who landed on the Greek island of Leros in October, but authorities have not confirmed whether that man’s fingerprints match any of the attackers’ remains.
We do not yet have information on the third attacker at the stadium.
Suspect on the runPolice have put out an international alert and arrest warrant for 26-year-old Salah Abdeslam, brother of one of the attackers who died. Salah Abdeslam is thought to have rented the black Volkswagen Polo used by the group that attacked the Bataclan. He was born and lived in Belgium but is a French national.
In the hours after the attacks, French police stopped Salah Abdeslam and two other men close to the border with Belgium, but allowed them to go on their way because their names were not at that stage on any wanted list.
Police now say he should be considered dangerous and should not be approached.
French police put out a wanted notice for Salah Abdeslam in connection with Friday’s attacks in Paris.
The arrestedA third Abdeslam brother, named in some reports as Mohammed Abdeslam, is believed to have been among seven people arrested on Saturday in the Molenbeek-Saint-Jean district of Brussels, suspected of being connected to the attacks.
Mostefai’s brother, father and sister-in-law, along with a number of other family members, are still being questioned by police.
Several people have also been detained in overnight anti-terrorist raids in Toulouse, Grenoble, Jeumont and Bobigny, but it is unclear whether any of these are directly connected to the Paris attacks. The Toulouse arrests are not said to be directly linked, but were carried out under the national state of emergency declared by president François Hollande after the Friday night attacks.