Maatadi – a small settlement in the highland interior of Central Papua
Maatadi is an Indonesian settlement located in the Central Papua (Papua Tengah) province, in Kabupaten Deiyai regency, specifically in the Kecamatan Tigi Barat district. Based on its coordinates (approximately 4.04 degrees south latitude and 136.34 degrees east longitude), it lies in the interior highland area of Papua island, relatively far from the coast and major cities. A dedicated Wikipedia entry or detailed documentation is not currently available, so the following account relies on generally verifiable characteristics of the broader region – the Deiyai regency, the Tigi Barat district, and the Central Papua province – making this distinction clear where necessary.
General overview
Maatadi does not appear on lists of widely known Indonesian tourist or commercial destinations. The Kecamatan Tigi Barat district, to which the settlement belongs, forms part of Kabupaten Deiyai regency. The Deiyai regency itself is a relatively young administrative unit: it was separated in 2008 from the former Kabupaten Paniai territory, and encompasses one of the most densely populated lake-adjacent areas of the Papuan plateau. The region is predominantly inhabited by the Mee (Ekari) ethnic group, who are the primary bearers of the region's traditional culture. Lake Tigi and its surroundings form the geographic spine of the regency: the lake is one of the plateau's significant water bodies, largely surrounded by highland landscape. Maatadi – according to the database, a village belonging to the Tigi Barat district – is likely a small agrarian community near this lake, though no verified source provides concrete factual data on this. It is generally observed in Papua's interior areas that villages rely primarily on subsistence agriculture, small livestock raising, and fishing, with infrastructure – roads, utility networks – often lacking or only partially developed in many places.
Real estate and investment
No publicly documented, factual data is available regarding Maatadi's real estate market. At the level of the broader Central Papua province and Deiyai regency, it can be noted that in Papua's interior areas, the formal real estate market is extremely narrow: property transactions are minimal, commercial development is rare, and in some areas traditional tribal land use rights also apply, existing in parallel with the state land registry. This is generally true of rural Papuan areas, not exclusively Maatadi. Within the generally applicable framework of Indonesian law, foreign private individuals cannot acquire direct ownership rights (Hak Milik) over Indonesian property; for them, primarily usufruct rights (Hak Pakai) or long-term lease agreements (Hak Sewa) are available forms. Investment opportunities in this part of the country are fundamentally linked to natural resources – forests, possible mining potential – but their regulation is complex and requires significant licensing procedures. Smaller-scale agricultural or local infrastructure development might be considered, but verified sources provide no concrete data regarding the feasibility of such projects in Maatadi.
Safety and security
No independent, factual statistics or documented reports are available regarding Maatadi's public safety. For Central Papua province as a whole, it can be stated in general terms that the region – particularly the highland interior areas – is characterized by certain security challenges. Indonesian authorities and certain international organizations periodically document that tribal conflicts occur in Papua's interior areas, as do tensions between law enforcement and armed groups, though their intensity and geographic distribution vary considerably. This is, however, contextual information generally known about the entire region, and in no way constitutes data specific to Maatadi. Travelers may require various levels of entry permits for certain parts of the province; the exact conditions for these should be verified with Indonesian authorities. Due to lack of sources, no factual village-level security assessment can be provided.
Tourist attractions
No verified source mentions named tourist attractions relating to Maatadi. In the broader Deiyai regency, one of the most well-known natural assets is Lake Tigi, which lies at the heart of the plateau and plays an important role in the life of the local Mee community. Traditional Papuan culture around the lake and in the Tigi Barat district – the customs, festive events, and craft traditions of the Mee ethnic group – may hold interest for visitors receptive to ethnographic tourism, though no documented data exists regarding organized tourist infrastructure. Lake Paniai, located in the territory of the neighboring former Kabupaten Paniai, is counted among the region's most important natural attractions, likely at some distance from Maatadi but within the same broader cultural and natural zone. On these grounds, Maatadi is primarily not a tourist destination but rather a small-town or village community whose accessibility in Papua's interior areas presents serious logistical challenges and requires substantial preparation on the part of visitors.
Summary
Maatadi is a small, not extensively documented Indonesian settlement belonging to the Tigi Barat district of Deiyai regency in Central Papua province. Its broader region, the Deiyai regency, belongs to the interior areas of the Papuan plateau, rich in traditional culture and natural values but poorly developed in infrastructure. Comprehensive, village-level data on the real estate market and public safety are not available; based on general characteristics of the region, the area is primarily home to communities oriented toward local, subsistence livelihoods, and cannot be counted among dynamically developing Indonesian destinations from either tourism or investment perspectives.

