Komauto/Kapiraya – Central Papuan highland settlement in Kabupaten Deiyai
Komauto/Kapiraya is a settlement belonging to the administrative area of Kecamatan Kapiraya, which forms part of Kabupaten Deiyai in Indonesia's Papua Tengah (Central Papua) province. Based on its coordinates (-3.9996° S, 136.3719° E), it is located in the internal highlands of Papua, in one of the most sparsely inhabited and difficult to access regions of eastern Indonesia. Kabupaten Deiyai itself became an independent regency in 2008 when it was separated from the territory of Kabupaten Paniai, and was officially registered by the Ministry of Internal Affairs on October 29. The regency seat is located in Tigi district, while Komauto/Kapiraya marks one of the administratively recorded points of the namesake Kecamatan Kapiraya.
General overview
No settlement-level descriptive source for Komauto/Kapiraya is currently available; therefore, the following description is based on verified data at the Kabupaten Deiyai level and general knowledge applicable to the region. Kabupaten Deiyai is part of the cultural and geographic unit inhabited by the Mee people (also known as the Ekari people or Mee Pago), whose central feature is Danau Tigi, a lake situated at the base of Gunung Deiyai. This inner-Papuan highland region is characterized by extremely low population density, strong tribal and community traditions, and limited road connections with the outside world. Komauto/Kapiraya, as a point within Kecamatan Kapiraya, similarly belongs to this difficult to access inner-Papuan countryside with relatively underdeveloped infrastructure. Settlements of this type in the Papuan highlands are typically composed of small communities based on subsistence farming (self-sufficient agriculture), where the presence of state administration, health and educational infrastructure is also limited. The life of the local community is determined by Mee cultural customs, a communal land use system, and social relations organized on the basis of adat (customary law).
Real estate and investment
No independent, publicly accessible real estate market data specific to Komauto/Kapiraya is known; therefore, the following reflects the general context of the broader region, namely Kabupaten Deiyai and Papua Tengah Province. In eastern Indonesia's inner-Papuan highland areas, the real estate market is extremely narrow and informal in character; the buying and selling of land parcels and buildings typically takes place on customary law basis within the local tribal community, rather than within the formal contractual frameworks customary in urban real estate markets. Due to the extent of state-owned forests and communal lands covered by adat law, formal private property registration is also a rare and complicated process. For foreign nationals, Indonesian regulations generally restrict direct property acquisition: foreigners as a general rule cannot acquire full ownership (Hak Milik) of Indonesian property and may at best obtain usage rights (Hak Pakai) under specified conditions. In the inner-Papuan regions, beyond these general rules, local adat law and the special autonomy framework (Papua's special autonomy) further complicate the investment situation. On this basis, Komauto/Kapiraya and the territory of Kecamatan Kapiraya cannot be considered typical investment destinations for either domestic or foreign property investors based on available information.
Safety and security
No reliable, publicly accessible settlement-level statistics on the public security situation in Komauto/Kapiraya are available. Papua Tengah Province as a whole, and within it the broader Kabupaten Deiyai region, has been considered in recent decades a zone of intermittently recurring conflicts between the Indonesian state and various Papuan groups. Due to armed incidents previously documented in adjacent areas of neighboring Kabupaten Paniai and the general unpredictability of the security situation, the travel risk of the inner-Papuan highlands is monitored with heightened attention by foreign ministries of several countries and international organizations. Nevertheless, these characteristics apply to the broader region and the province; no independent, reliable data is available on the specific public security conditions in Komauto/Kapiraya, therefore direct conclusions about this point cannot be drawn. Anyone planning to travel to this region is advised to inform themselves about the current local and regional security situation through competent consular authorities and Indonesian government bodies.
Tourist attractions
No tourist attractions documented by name in connection with Komauto/Kapiraya appear in available sources. Based on verified information at the Kabupaten Deiyai level, however, the regency's most significant natural feature is Danau Tigi, the lake on whose shore the regency seat is also located and which gave the natural district its name. The lake is situated at the base of Gunung Deiyai mountain, which also gave the regency its name. The inner-Papuan highland landscape and the cultural heritage of the Mee ethnic group represent in themselves unique characteristics within the region; however, visits to these sites are currently not significant for organized tourism due to infrastructure and accessibility constraints. In the case of Komauto/Kapiraya, nearby accessible attractions cannot be identified, as data providing precise distances or describing local attractions is not available.
Summary
Komauto/Kapiraya is a point in the inner-Papuan highlands located within the administrative area of Kecamatan Kapiraya in Kabupaten Deiyai, Papua Tengah Province. The regency gained independence in 2008 from Kabupaten Paniai and is situated within a natural environment defined by Danau Tigi and Gunung Deiyai, in a cultural zone inhabited by the Mee people. Due to the absence of settlement-level sources, detailed demographic, real estate market, or public security data for Komauto/Kapiraya are unknown; based on available information, the broader region can be classified among difficult to access inner-Papuan areas with relatively underdeveloped infrastructure, where populations live according to tribal community traditions.

