Aturan Mumpo – a small Sumatran village in Kecamatan Pematang Tiga, Kabupaten Bengkulu Tengah
Aturan Mumpo is a Sumatran settlement located in Kabupaten Bengkulu Tengah, which is part of Bengkulu Province (Provinsi Bengkulu), within Kecamatan Pematang Tiga district. Based on its coordinates (-3.61° south latitude, 102.26° east longitude), it is situated in the inland, continental part of the regency, away from the Indian Ocean coast and toward the interior of the island. The seat of Kabupaten Bengkulu Tengah is in Karang Tinggi kecamatan, so the regency's administrative center directs the management of the entire area from there, including villages in Kecamatan Pematang Tiga. Since available source material extends only to the regency level, the detailed description of the settlement relies on data from the broader administrative unit.
General overview
Aturan Mumpo is not among recognized tourist destinations, and no standalone, detailed description of the village appears in available public sources. The settlement is one of the administrative units of Kecamatan Pematang Tiga, which operates as part of Kabupaten Bengkulu Tengah. The regency itself is a relatively young administrative unit: under Law No. 24 of 2008, it separated from the former Kabupaten Bengkulu Utara, and has since organized its territorial administration at the independent regency level. According to 2025 data, the total population of Bengkulu Tengah is approximately 125,263 people, with a population density of roughly 100 people per square kilometer, which is relatively low and typical of rural, agriculturally oriented interior Sumatran areas. The ethnic composition of the regency is predominantly determined by the Rejang and Lembak ethnic groups, who traditionally inhabit the interior regions of the province. These ethnocultural characteristics may apply to villages in Kecamatan Pematang Tiga, including presumably Aturan Mumpo, although specific data relating only to this village is not available. The economic foundation of the area is suggested by agricultural activities that are generally characteristic of interior Sumatran villages, and to a lesser extent by the exploitation of natural resources, though data specifically naming these latter activities is not provided in the source.
Real estate and investment
No verifiable sources exist at either the local or district level regarding the real estate market of Aturan Mumpo or investment opportunities there. The broader real estate market of Kabupaten Bengkulu Tengah likewise has limited public documentation: the regency became an independent administrative unit in 2008 and is considered one of the province's smaller population areas and more rural regions. In inland Sumatran, low-density rural areas, it is generally characteristic that real estate transactions and prices are considerably more modest than in the provincial capital (Bengkulu city) or in more developed tourist regions. Under the generally applicable framework of Indonesian property ownership regulations, foreign nationals cannot acquire full ownership rights (Hak Milik) over real estate in Indonesia; they have available to them Hak Pakai (usage rights) and various rental arrangements, which are governed by Indonesian law. This restriction applies throughout the country, and thus to Bengkulu Province and its regency villages as well. From an investment perspective, the region may have potential primarily in local agricultural and possible natural resource-based opportunities, but detailed analysis of these would require examination of current market sources at the regency or district level.
Safety and security
No concrete data or crime statistics at either the local or district level regarding public safety in Aturan Mumpo or Kecamatan Pematang Tiga are available in accessible sources. Bengkulu Province as a whole, and within it Kabupaten Bengkulu Tengah, share the general characteristics of rural, village-based interior Sumatran areas in this regard: the insularity of Indonesian rural communities and traditional community norms often determine daily order in many places. Generally speaking, smaller villages in Indonesia – particularly those not situated along busy tourist routes – maintain relatively quiet, community-organized lives, but this offers no guarantee and does not substitute for guidance from local authorities or persons with reliable local knowledge. Visitors to the region are advised to seek current information about local conditions from the territorially competent body of the Indonesian National Police (Polri) or from consular sources.
Tourist attractions
No named tourist attractions appear in available sources regarding Aturan Mumpo, and no such data is available for Kecamatan Pematang Tiga district. The source likewise names no specific tourist destinations within the broader area of Kabupaten Bengkulu Tengah. To the north, the regency neighbors Kabupaten Bengkulu Utara; to the east lie Kabupaten Kepahiang and Kabupaten Rejang Lebong; to the south is Kabupaten Seluma; while to the west the regency borders Bengkulu city and the Indian Ocean. For Bengkulu Province as a whole, the provincial capital, Bengkulu city, contains known historical sites – such as Fort Marlborough, a fortress surviving from the period of Dutch colonization – but these are distant locations outside the regency and the village in question, belonging to different administrative units. In inland, rural kecamatan, the natural landscape, agricultural cultural landscape, and the traditions of local Rejang and Lembak communities may represent elements of potential interest, though no named sources are available regarding these aspects of Aturan Mumpo.
Summary
Aturan Mumpo is a small Sumatran village that belongs to Kecamatan Pematang Tiga district and Kabupaten Bengkulu Tengah in Bengkulu Province. The regency has been an independent administrative unit since 2008, with a population of nearly 125,000 and low population density, where the Rejang and Lembak ethnicities form the backbone of the local community. No standalone, detailed public sources are available for the village, so more accurate local knowledge can only be obtained through on-site inquiry or from the competent authorities of the regency. When assessing real estate and investment matters, public safety, and tourist opportunities, it is advisable to base one's judgment on the context of the broader regency and province level until more precise local data can be obtained.

