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 'Monster crocodile must be captured now'
    Lee Rondganger
    November 15 2004 at 10:59AM
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Beneath the murky waters of Burundi's Lake Tanganyika lives a monster crocodile that has struck fear into the hearts of people who live on the banks of the lake.

About 12m long and weighing more than a ton, the giant crocodile is believed to have eaten up to 300 villagers and an adult hippo.

The villagers around Lake Tanganyika call him Gustave, the man-eating crocodile.

Bizarre disappearances which were initially thought to have been the result of tribal warfare or the work of a serial killer are being attributed to Gustave.

On Tuesday night at 10pm on National Geographic - DStv's channel 66 - South African biologist Dr Alison Leslie and French herpetologist Patrice Faye try to apprehend Gustave before he kills again or is killed.
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On Tuesday a documentary, called Capturing The Killer Crocodile, will follow Leslie and Faye as they race against time to capture Gustave amid an ongoing civil war.

    • This article was originally published on page 3 of Cape Times on November 15, 2004
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