Mogodagi – a small settlement in Kabupaten Deiyai, Central Papua
Mogodagi is an Indonesian settlement belonging to Kapiraya District (Kecamatan Kapiraya) within the Kabupaten Deiyai administrative unit. Kabupaten Deiyai is part of Papua Tengah (Central Papua) Province, which became an independent province on 25 July 2022 from the western regencies of the former Papua Province. Based on coordinates, the settlement is located near southern latitude in Indonesia's interior Papuan territories. Independent, verified source material on Mogodagi is not available, so the following description is based on province-level data and generally known characteristics of the broader region, which is clearly indicated in each section.
General overview
Mogodagi does not appear in widely available tourism or administrative databases, which in itself indicates that this is a small, sparsely inhabited interior Papuan village. Kabupaten Deiyai is located in the central interior regions of Papua Tengah, on highland and mountainous terrain near the Jayawijaya mountain range. According to province-level data, Papua Tengah has a total area of 61,079.59 km², with an estimated population of slightly more than 1.49 million in mid-2025, indicating very low population density across the entire province. Deiyai Regency, to which Mogodagi belongs, is suited to this sparsely populated interior region: the local population largely pursues a traditional lifestyle, with agriculture and subsistence farming being predominant. Kapiraya District, within which the settlement is administratively located, is likewise a small territorial unit with limited infrastructure. Road accessibility in interior Papua is generally difficult, with transportation in many cases managed by air or river boat services.
Real estate and investment
Independent real estate market data for Mogodagi is not available. At the broader Papua Tengah Province level, it can be said that in interior, mountainous and highland areas, the real estate market operates almost entirely within informal frameworks, with organized commercial real estate activity being minimal. The province's economic center is concentrated around Timika (Kabupaten Mimika) and the Grasberg gold mining zone, where Freeport Indonesia's mining operations generate considerable economic activity. In smaller interior villages within the Deiyai region – such as Mogodagi likely is – real estate transactions are largely tied to community data and traditional property rights customs. Under Indonesia's general regulations for foreigners, foreign individuals cannot acquire direct land ownership (Hak Milik) but may engage in longer-term lease arrangements under certain conditions (e.g., Hak Pakai). This general Indonesian legal framework also applies to interior Papuan territories, though in these areas the customary law (adat land) system and state regulations further complicate matters. From an investment perspective, this area is not currently considered an active real estate market target.
Safety and security
Concrete, verified data on public safety in Mogodagi is not available. For the broader Central Papuan region, it can be generally stated that in interior areas, public safety is influenced by difficult infrastructure and scarcity of resources, though generalizable crime statistics for this specific area cannot be cited. Regarding Papua Province as a whole, it is known that tribal conflicts occasionally occur in interior areas, connected to traditional disputes among local communities, though their nature and extent are highly variable and location-specific. The Indonesian state is present in the region through its administrative and security institutions, but in interior areas this presence may be more limited than in other parts of the country due to infrastructural constraints. In all cases, obtaining up-to-date information about the location from reliable, current sources before travel is recommended.
Tourist attractions
Mogodagi itself is not listed as a tourist destination in either regional or international sources. Based on province-level source material, the most well-known tourist areas of Papua Tengah Province are located in other regencies: in the northern part, Nabire borders Cenderawasih Bay National Park (Teluk Cenderawasih National Park), where coral reefs, sandy islands and whale sharks attract nature enthusiasts. In the center of the province, the Jayawijaya mountain range rises, with Puncak Jaya at its summit, Indonesia's highest peak, one of the few points near the equator that still retain glaciers in the world. However, these natural attractions are at considerable distance from both Mogodagi and Deiyai Regency, located in different administrative units. Deiyai Regency itself and Kapiraya District do not possess any named tourist attractions identifiable from verified sources. The natural and cultural richness of interior Papuan areas – including the traditions of the Mee Pago cultural region – may attract interest in ethnographic tourism, though this is typically approached within the framework of organized expeditions conducted with experienced guides.
Summary
Mogodagi is a small, difficult-to-access interior Papuan settlement in Kapiraya District, Kabupaten Deiyai, in Papua Tengah Province. The settlement does not have publicly available, detailed information from demographic, tourist or real estate market perspectives. The broader region, Papua Tengah, became an independent province in 2022, and in its interior areas daily life is characterized by low population density, limited infrastructure and strong traditional community lifestyles. The province's economic and tourism centers are concentrated in other regencies, with Mogodagi and its immediate surroundings remaining among the quiet, difficult-to-access interior regions.

