Beringin Datar – a village in Pino district, South Bengkulu regency
Beringin Datar is an Indonesian village (desa) located in the southern part of Bengkulu Province (Provinsi Bengkulu) on the island of Sumatra, within the administrative unit of Kecamatan Pino in Kabupaten Bengkulu Selatan. Based on its coordinates, the village is located at approximately –4.39° southern latitude and 102.94° eastern longitude, indicating a position in the southwestern inland area of Sumatra with more mountainous terrain. Bengkulu Province is one of Indonesia's less densely populated and less frequently visited provinces, with an economy traditionally determined by agriculture and mining.
General overview
Based on available sources, Beringin Datar is an administratively classified desa, that is, a village-level administrative unit within the Kecamatan Pino area. The Indonesian Wikipedia entry records only this basic administrative classification: the settlement belongs to Kecamatan Pino, which in turn belongs to Kabupaten Bengkulu Selatan and Bengkulu Province. Specific, source-backed data – such as population size, land area, economic profile, or distinctive characteristics of the village – cannot be determined from available documentation. Generally speaking, settlements in the Kabupaten Bengkulu Selatan district are mostly agricultural villages with smaller populations, where the livelihoods of local communities are typically based on plantation farming – primarily rice, coffee, rubber, and palm oil production. Kecamatan Pino itself is a relatively smaller, inland-situated district within the Bengkulu Selatan region, whose settlements are not among the province's priority development or tourism destinations.
Real estate and investment
No real estate market or investment data are available for Beringin Datar as a specific settlement. In the broader regional context of Kabupaten Bengkulu Selatan and Bengkulu Province, it can be said that the real estate market is relatively underdeveloped and has low transaction volumes compared to other, more developed regions of the country. The province is primarily relevant for local agricultural and raw material extraction investments, rather than as a tourism or real estate investment destination. In Indonesia, property ownership by foreign nationals is legally regulated and restricted: Hak Milik (full ownership) is available exclusively to Indonesian citizens, while foreigners can only access property use through Hak Pakai (use rights) or Hak Sewa (lease rights) at most. This general legal framework applies throughout the country, including in Bengkulu Province and in the case of Beringin Datar. In smaller, inland-situated villages such as Beringin Datar presumably is, property transactions are typically low, and the local land market mainly responds to the internal needs of local agricultural communities.
Safety and security
No settlement-level public safety data are available for Beringin Datar in accessible sources. The general public safety situation in Bengkulu Province is not among the priority problem areas in the Indonesian context; however, in certain inland areas of the province, infrastructure and official presence may be more limited than in more developed, urban regions. Indonesia as a whole is a country with moderate public safety levels, where serious crimes in smaller rural villages are generally less common than in major cities, but precise local conditions depend on the specific community and its environment. No specific statistical data or source-backed assessment is available for Beringin Datar; therefore, any conclusions on this matter should be considered only as general characterization of the broader regional context.
Tourist attractions
Available sources mention no specific named tourist attractions or natural landmarks for Beringin Datar. In the broader Bengkulu Province region, however, numerous natural and cultural sights can be found, which are associated with the more well-known areas of the province. Near Bengkulu city, in the northern part of the province, for example, the Bukit Barisan mountain range can be found, which runs along Sumatra's longitudinal axis, and several beach areas are known along the province's coastline. Bengkulu Province is home to the Rafflesia arnoldii, which produces the world's largest flower, and certain specimens of this plant can be accessed at various points throughout the province; however, whether such a location exists in the immediate vicinity of Beringin Datar or in Kecamatan Pino cannot be determined from available sources. Within Kabupaten Bengkulu Selatan, better-known attractions are more closely associated with the regency's capital, Manna city, which serves as the administrative center of the regency. Based on Beringin Datar's inland, presumably agricultural location, its role in terms of tourist traffic may be secondary in the surrounding area.
Summary
Beringin Datar is an Indonesian village-level administrative unit (desa) on the island of Sumatra in the southern part of Bengkulu Province, within the areas of Kecamatan Pino and Kabupaten Bengkulu Selatan. Available documentation records only the basic administrative classification; detailed demographic, economic, tourism, or public safety data relating to the village are not currently publicly accessible. The settlement is located in the less visited, inland areas of Bengkulu Province and likely exhibits the characteristics typical of the region's small, agriculturally-based villages. Regarding real estate market and investment matters, the general legal and market frameworks applicable to Bengkulu Province and Indonesia are the determining factors.

