Updated 11 p.m. ET

Myanmar officials say bodies and debris have been found from a military plane that disappeared Wednesday with more than 100 passengers and crew aboard.

Military spokesman Gen. Myat Min Oo says the wreckage was found in the sea west of the town of Laung Lone, according to the Associated Press.

Earlier, a statement on the Facebook page of Senior Gen. Min Aung Hlaing said the plane left the coastal town of Myeik at 1:06 p.m. local time, bound for Yangon, Myanmar's largest city, The AP reports.

Authorities provided varying totals of the number of people onboard, ranging from 104 to 122. The route was a typical weekly flight, with scheduled stops at a number of towns along the way, according to Reuters.

Just 29 minutes after takeoff, contact with the aircraft was lost — it was reportedly flying at an altitude of 18,000 feet and was about 20 miles west of the town of Dawei.

The area where the plane disappeared is about 440 miles north of where Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 went off radar in March 2014, with 239 aboard, according to the AP.

Gen. Myat Min Oo told the news service that the aircraft was a Chinese-made Y-8 turboprop that had logged 809 flying hours since the military purchased it in March 2016.

Kyaw Kyaw Htey, a civil aviation official at Myeik airport, told Reuters that visibility had been good and the weather normal when the aircraft took off. Meanwhile, The New York Times reported that residents said weather in the area along the flight path was bad, with pounding monsoon rains.

The military announced that it had launched a search for the missing plane, dispatching six navy ships and three military planes, according to Reuters.

The wire service reported that hundreds of people gathered on the shore near the town of Launglon, close to where the navy was searching. Maj. Gen. Aung Ye Win, the chief of military information, said no traces of the plane or its passengers had been spotted, the Times reports.

As the newspaper notes, Myanmar's military plays a key role in the government, holding a quarter of the seats in Parliament and controlling three important ministries.

Copyright 2017 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

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