Alekos registered everything he had heard. He then took out his pen and a card and begun writing on the back of it. "So, it's a predatory lake animal, that is big enough to take out an elephant." Alekos muttered to himself. "I think we're dealing with a reptile or an amphibian...." Alekos normally muttered what he was writing as he was writing it. The Kaiju couldn't be a mammal, and it wasn't a bird, or a fish. There was a possibility it could be an invertebrate, however. Alekos remembered the attack of a giant crab like creature a few weeks ago. Everyone thought it must have been a fish, as it was taking out submarines. But, if this creature in East Africa is an invertebrate, it probably wouldn't want to leave the safety of the water. Alekos straightened his hair, and some of the wrinkles in his clothes, before standing up. He cleared his throat, and begun to speak in fluent English, but with a heavy accent. "This situation we have developing in Kenya is deadly. We need to sort it out as quickly as we can. Through my research I have grouped every attack that we have currently recorded together, and a lot of them show similar traits. A lot of the reptilian or amphibian attacks so far have been from creatures that have appeared aquatic. For example, the salamander like creature that demolished Naha. This creature that we have in East Africa is seemingly an aquatic creature. I have made the assumption that is creature is reptilian in nature. We can see in normal nature, amphibious creatures live in both water and on land. However, a lot of these animals need air to breathe, yet without water they will die. Take the common frog. It need to come to the surface to breathe air. Yet if it is deprived of water, it dries out and dies. To cut to the point, maybe we should try stopping this creature by leading it away from the water, or possibly cutting it off from the water source. But we will need more information on this creature before we can come to a sensible and rational conclusion to the situation." Alekos finished talking, but remained standing in case any questions were directed at him.