Abeuk Jaloh – gampong in Jangka district, Kabupaten Bireuen, Aceh province
Abeuk Jaloh is an Indonesian village (gampong) located in the Jangka kecamatan (district) of the Kabupaten Bireuen administrative unit in Aceh province, on the northern part of the island of Sumatra. The settlement's coordinates are 5.2228118° north latitude and 96.7721525° east longitude, positioning it in the eastern part of Aceh province, near the coastal areas facing the Strait of Malacca. In the records of the Indonesian Ministry of Internal Affairs (Kementerian Dalam Negeri), the gampong's official identification number is 11.11.10.2027. The available source material documents only the administrative classification of the village, and thus the broader context of Jangka district, as well as Kabupaten Bireuen and Aceh province, provides a framework for understanding its more detailed characteristics.
General overview
Abeuk Jaloh is one of the gampongs belonging to Jangka kecamatan, administratively classified within Kabupaten Bireuen. Bireuen regency extends across the eastern coastal strip of Aceh province, with the regency seat in Bireuen city. Jangka district is one of several kecamatan within the regency, encompassing agricultural, sparsely populated rural areas. Aceh province, to which the settlement belongs, is the northernmost province of Sumatra and holds a special autonomy status within Indonesia, granted in part due to the distinct Acehnese cultural and historical traditions in the region, and in part as a result of the 2005 Helsinki Peace Agreement. The province's population is predominantly Muslim, and Islamic traditions play a defining role in local social organization, evident in daily life, architecture, and local customs. The gampong, as an administrative unit, is the name for Indonesian villages based on Acehnese traditions, and each gampong is headed by a gampong leader (keuchik). Available data on Abeuk Jaloh contains only the administrative classification noted above; reliable, verifiable information regarding the settlement's size, population density, and infrastructure is currently unavailable.
Real estate and investment
No reliable local data sources or detailed market surveys are available regarding Abeuk Jaloh's real estate market; the following reflects the broader context of Aceh province and Kabupaten Bireuen. Kabupaten Bireuen is a regency built primarily on agriculture and fisheries, where real estate transactions and investment activity are typically lower than in larger cities in Aceh province, such as Banda Aceh or Lhokseumawa. In rural, small villages—such as Abeuk Jaloh likely is—land prices and property values are substantially below those of urban areas, the market is less liquid, and a significant portion of transactions consist of informal dealings. Under Indonesian law, foreign nationals generally cannot acquire direct land ownership (Hak Milik), and this restriction applies equally in Aceh's special autonomy area. Foreigners in Indonesia typically gain property access through long-term lease arrangements (Hak Sewa) or in some cases through Hak Pakai (usage rights) frameworks; however, precise conditions require legal consultation. From an investment perspective, rural Acehnese gampongs generally do not constitute target areas for foreign investment; the utilization of agricultural land is likewise subject to strict local and provincial regulations.
Safety and security
Concrete, reliable local statistics on public safety in Abeuk Jaloh are not available. Regarding Aceh province as a whole, during the nearly two decades that have elapsed since the 2005 peace process, the province has generally become more stable, and the armed conflict previously linked to the Gerakan Aceh Merdeka (GAM) freedom movement has concluded. According to assessments by the UN and various civil organizations, Aceh has gradually consolidated during the post-conflict period, though some analysts note that economic marginalization and infrastructure deficiencies persist in rural areas. Kabupaten Bireuen is a relatively small, rural-characterized regency where urban crime patterns are less characteristic; however, the available source material does not convey reliable, up-to-date local statistics on public security. For Aceh, current travel advisories are typically recommended to be verified through official sources such as the Indonesian Ministry of Foreign Affairs or the host country's embassy information to assess current conditions.
Tourist attractions
No named tourist attractions in Abeuk Jaloh are listed in available sources. Detailed, verifiable descriptions of tourist offerings in Jangka district and Kabupaten Bireuen are not available. However, within Aceh province as a whole, numerous significant attractions and natural endowments are known, accessible at varying distances depending on the kabupaten level. In Banda Aceh city, the provincial capital, for example, stands the Aceh Tsunami Museum, created in commemoration of the 2004 tsunami, which holds outstanding significance regarding disaster memory and documentation of reconstruction. Along Aceh's northern and eastern coastlines, numerous traditional Acehnese fishing villages and agricultural landscapes characterize the region, which may be of interest from cultural and ethnographic perspectives. The main settlements of Kabupaten Bireuen lie on the province's coast, along the trans-Sumatran main road, thus functioning more as transit stations than as primary destinations for those traveling through the region. To identify places to visit nearest Abeuk Jaloh, it is advisable to consider Bireuen city's immediate surroundings, where basic services and transportation connections are more readily accessible.
Summary
Abeuk Jaloh is an Acehnese gampong in Jangka kecamatan of Kabupaten Bireuen in Sumatra, regarding which publicly available documentation currently extends only to its administrative identification and classification. The broader region, Aceh province, is an area of Indonesian special autonomy with strong Islamic cultural traditions and a post-2005 peace process stabilization period in its background. From a real estate and investment perspective, rural gampongs generally fall among less active markets, and Indonesian law establishes strict frameworks for foreign property acquisition. Regarding public safety and local attractions, it is advisable to consult current sources at the regency and provincial levels to gain a more accurate situational assessment.

