Diraluk – a small highland settlement in the interior of Papua, in Kalome District
Diraluk is an Indonesian settlement located in Papua Tengah (Central Papua) Province, in Puncak Jaya Regency, specifically within Kalome District (kecamatan). Based on its coordinates (-3.4467891, 137.8427298), it is situated in the remote, highland zone of the region, far from the country's major cities and developed infrastructure corridors. It ranks among the least documented areas of Kabupaten Puncak Jaya, and does not appear in any standalone, detailed description in publicly available local or international sources. Regarding the broader region, what is certainly known is this: Puncak Jaya, the name-giver of the regency (also known as Piramida Carstensz or Nemangkawi Ninggok in the Amungka language), is Indonesia's highest peak, belongs to the Sudirman Range, and reaches 4,884 meters above sea level.
General overview
Diraluk belongs to Kalome kecamatan, which forms part of Puncak Jaya kabupaten. The kabupaten as a whole extends across high-altitude highland terrain within the Sudirman Range and ranks among the least densely populated and most difficult to access regions of Papua Tengah Province. In terms of biogeography, the area exhibits conditions typical of Papua's interior highlands: the road network is fragmented or absent, and accessibility is achieved largely through small aircraft or on foot. The settlements of Kalome District – including Diraluk – are primarily home to small communities engaged in local, traditional livelihoods. Settlement-level administrative, demographic, or infrastructural data do not appear in available sources, so only more general context at the kabupaten level is available regarding the settlement. It should be noted that throughout Puncak Jaya kabupaten, administrative developments and the 2022 provincial reorganization (when Papua Tengah Province became autonomous) brought changes to regional administration that affect small highland villages – including Diraluk.
Real estate and investment
No publicly available real estate market data exists for Diraluk and Kalome District, neither transaction prices nor development project documentation. In the broader context of Puncak Jaya kabupaten, it can be stated that the region's real estate market is severely limited and fundamentally differs from that of Indonesia's major cities or tourist destinations. Due to access difficulties, underdeveloped infrastructure, and a narrow local economy, real estate transactions serve almost exclusively the needs of local communities. Within the framework of general Indonesian property regulations, it should be noted that foreign nationals cannot acquire full ownership rights (Hak Milik) to real estate in Indonesia; only specified, limited property rights (such as Hak Pakai, or use rights) are available to them, and only if certain conditions are met. In Papua's interior highland areas, real estate matters are moreover closely connected to local tribal and community land-use systems (ulayat), which constitute culturally determined frameworks beyond formal legal regulations. Based on all this, external investor activity is not characteristic of the interior areas of Puncak Jaya kabupaten, including Kalome District, and it is not expected to change in the foreseeable future for Diraluk.
Safety and security
Settlement-level statistics or law enforcement data regarding Diraluk's public safety do not appear in publicly available sources. Puncak Jaya kabupaten as a whole – and more broadly, the Central Papuan highlands – is considered a region about which Indonesian authorities and certain international bodies have periodically indicated social tensions; these are primarily rooted in political and tribal conflicts spanning decades. These phenomena are primarily characteristic of certain interior areas of the kabupaten and infrastructurally strategic points, yet specific information regarding Diraluk or Kalome District in this regard is also unavailable. Before traveling to the region, those concerned should consult the current travel recommendations of Indonesian authorities and their own country's foreign ministry, as the situation may change over time and control and assistance capacities are limited in the interior Papuan highlands.
Tourist attractions
No named tourist attractions appear in available sources for Diraluk and Kalome District. At the broader Puncak Jaya kabupaten level, however, mention should be made of the natural geographic peculiarity that characterizes the region's most well-known point: the eponymous Puncak Jaya (Piramida Carstensz, or Nemangkawi Ninggok in the Amungka language) peak rises at 4,884 meters and, as Indonesia's highest point, is one of the world's seven highest continental summits (Seven Summits). Located near the summit is the Carstensz Glacier, Indonesia's only remaining tropical glacier; this natural formation is gradually diminishing due to global warming. The accessibility of the summit and glacier is extremely difficult: it requires expedition-level preparation, government permits, and substantial logistical support. Diraluk lies at what is probably a considerable distance in a straight line from these precisely undetermined natural features within the kabupaten, and due to access difficulties, even the nearest such attraction is not easily accessible from the region's interior villages. No documented, independent tourist attraction related to the settlement is known.
Summary
Diraluk is a small highland settlement that is not detailed in available public sources and belongs to Kalome kecamatan and Puncak Jaya kabupaten in Papua Tengah Province, Papua. The broader region is characterized as a difficult-to-access, sparsely populated interior highland area connected to the Sudirman Range, whose most prominent natural geographic feature is the 4,884-meter Puncak Jaya summit. In terms of real estate market, tourism, and public security, the general characteristics of the kabupaten apply, as reliable, publicly available data does not exist regarding Diraluk itself. For those interested in the region, thorough advance research and consultation with authorities are essential.

