<p>French authorities on Saturday shut the airport in the southern city of Montpellier for an indefinite period after a cargo plane overran the runway and ended up with its nose in a nearby lake.</p>.<p>Images showed the Boeing 737 of the West Atlantic cargo carrier tilting with its nose in the lake and body perched on the land. The three crew escaped the accident in the early hours of Saturday unhurt, local authorities said.</p>.<p>The prefecture for the Herault region said the airport would be closed to both passenger and cargo planes until further notice as a security measure and until a specialised firm came to take the plane away.</p>.<p>"We will not reopen the airport as long as the aircraft is on the runway and the investigation is not finished," an airport source, who asked not to be named, told AFP.</p>.<p>"After the removal of the aircraft, the runway will also be carefully checked," added the source.</p>.<p>Twenty-one commercial flights had been scheduled on Saturday at the airport which in peak season sees up to 197,000 passengers a month.</p>.<p>"A technical incident prevents normal operation," said an English message on the airport's website headlined "closure of Montpellier airport".</p>.<p>The website showed that flights had either been cancelled or diverted to Marseille.</p>
<p>French authorities on Saturday shut the airport in the southern city of Montpellier for an indefinite period after a cargo plane overran the runway and ended up with its nose in a nearby lake.</p>.<p>Images showed the Boeing 737 of the West Atlantic cargo carrier tilting with its nose in the lake and body perched on the land. The three crew escaped the accident in the early hours of Saturday unhurt, local authorities said.</p>.<p>The prefecture for the Herault region said the airport would be closed to both passenger and cargo planes until further notice as a security measure and until a specialised firm came to take the plane away.</p>.<p>"We will not reopen the airport as long as the aircraft is on the runway and the investigation is not finished," an airport source, who asked not to be named, told AFP.</p>.<p>"After the removal of the aircraft, the runway will also be carefully checked," added the source.</p>.<p>Twenty-one commercial flights had been scheduled on Saturday at the airport which in peak season sees up to 197,000 passengers a month.</p>.<p>"A technical incident prevents normal operation," said an English message on the airport's website headlined "closure of Montpellier airport".</p>.<p>The website showed that flights had either been cancelled or diverted to Marseille.</p>