Fakafuku – small settlement in Agimuga District, Central Papua
Fakafuku is a settlement within the administrative area of Kabupaten Mimika in Papua Tengah (Central Papua) province, Indonesia, belonging to the Agimuga kecamatan. Based on its coordinates (−4.5176° southern latitude, 137.5668° eastern longitude), the area is located in Papua's interior, mountainous and hilly zone. Publicly available statistical or descriptive sources specific to the settlement are not currently accessible; the summary below therefore provides information based on verified data at the regency level and broader geographic context, clearly indicating when information is not settlement-specific.
General overview
Fakafuku belongs to Agimuga kecamatan, which is one of the more remote and difficult to access districts within Kabupaten Mimika. The kabupaten itself is quite extensive with varied topography: according to regency-level sources, lower-lying areas are characterized by swamps and rivers, while higher regions have a mountainous character. The Kamoro and Sempan ethnic groups inhabit the lower areas and are known for their carving work; in the higher-altitude zones, the Amungme and Damal communities are the indigenous inhabitants. Based on Fakafuku's geographic coordinates, the settlement may be situated near the mountainous and transitional zone, though direct sources are not available. The capital of Kabupaten Mimika is Timika city, which is also the most significant administrative and supply center for the region. According to 2024 Ministry of Interior data, the kabupaten's total population is 318,679 people, with a population density of 15 people/km², which is considered extremely low—this also indicates that numerous small, dispersed settlements exist within the regency. Fakafuku appears to be one such smaller, rural community.
Real estate and investment
Independent real estate market data or price levels specific to Fakafuku are not currently available publicly. The broader context at Kabupaten Mimika level is, however, informative: PT Freeport Indonesia, one of the world's largest gold and copper ore mining operations, operates within the regency's territory in Tembagapura District. This mining presence substantially influences economic activity and real estate market turnover in certain parts of the kabupaten—particularly in the immediate vicinity of Timika city. However, in smaller, remote, and difficult to access villages further away from this center, real estate turnover is characteristically low and organized investment markets are essentially non-existent. In Indonesia, foreign nationals cannot acquire full ownership rights (Hak Milik) to real property; they must use either Hak Pakai (usage rights) or solutions through various business organizational forms—this general legal framework applies equally in Papua and must be considered in any investment decision.
Safety and security
Specific, settlement-level data on safety and security in Fakafuku is not available. Generally speaking, interior areas of Papua—including certain districts within Kabupaten Mimika—require heightened caution on the part of tourists and potential investors due to difficult accessibility, sparse infrastructure, and social tensions in certain areas. According to Indonesia's generally accepted foreign affairs advisories, it is recommended to consult current official and consular warnings before traveling to Papua's interior regions. In small, isolated villages, the role of local informal social norms and community relations is typically more determinative than any organized formal security system. Any concrete security assessment can only be reliably obtained from current on-site sources.
Tourist attractions
No sources identify specific tourist attractions directly associated with Fakafuku. Regarding the broader Kabupaten Mimika, regency-level descriptions name two significant infrastructure hubs: the Moses Kilangin Airport (Distrik Mimika Baru) and the Poumako Port (Distrik Mimika Timur), which are primarily important from a logistics perspective. The kabupaten's natural assets include varied topography, rivers, wetland areas, and higher mountainous regions, though specifically named tourist destinations accessible in Fakafuku or Agimuga District connected to these features cannot be identified from sources. The carving craft traditions of the Kamoro and Sempan peoples, as well as Amungme and Damal culture, are characteristic of the kabupaten as a whole and may generally form part of the experience for culturally interested visitors in a Papuan journey—however, no specific cultural program or visitable site in Fakafuku is known.
Summary
Fakafuku is a small settlement belonging to Agimuga District in Kabupaten Mimika, Papua, for which detailed independent source material is not currently accessible. Based on regency-level data, the area is characterized by extremely low population density, varied natural environment, and economic background linked to significant mineral resources. Fakafuku itself is in all likelihood an isolated, small rural community that does not rank among tourism-active or real estate market-surveyed locations. The characteristics provided here are determined largely by regency-level context; any local-level decision-making requires on-site investigation.

