Alama – Highland distrik in Nduga Regency formed from Geselma in 2011
Alama is a distrik in Nduga Regency, Highland Papua (Papua Pegunungan) Province, in the rugged central cordillera of New Guinea. According to the Indonesian Wikipedia entry for the district, Alama was created as a pemekaran from Distrik Geselma under Perda No. 5/2011 and is composed of four kampung — Alama, Gin, Kulesa and Nolit — under Kemendagri code 95.08.15 and BPS code 9429033. Most of these kampung were themselves created or reorganised from the older Yutpul kampung area under Perda No. 4/2011. Nduga Regency, of which Alama is part, sprawls across very high mountain country south of Wamena toward the Lorentz World Heritage area, with elevations rising into the alpine zone and small clan-based settlements scattered across very difficult terrain.
Tourism and attractions
Alama is not a tourism destination, and Wikipedia does not list named visitor attractions inside the distrik. The wider Nduga Regency and the surrounding cordillera, of which Alama is a small part, contain some of the most dramatic high mountain landscape in Indonesia, with deep forested valleys, montane and alpine vegetation and tributaries feeding the Baliem and other major Papuan river systems. Highland Papua more broadly is internationally known for the Baliem Valley around Wamena and for the cultural traditions of highland Papuan peoples, including honai round houses, sweet potato (hipere) cultivation and pig-based ceremonial life. Visitors interested in this part of New Guinea typically work through Wamena and engage local guides and church networks; standalone leisure travel into Nduga distrik such as Alama is essentially absent and depends on security conditions and authorisation.
Property market
Formal property market data specific to Alama is not published in web sources, and the distrik sits far outside any conventional Indonesian housing market. Typical built environment in Nduga distrik is village-scale: traditional honai round houses, government-built timber and corrugated-iron service buildings, schools, puskesmas, churches and small administrative offices. Land tenure is overwhelmingly customary, governed by clan-based adat rights over forest, garden and settlement land rather than by formal sertifikat titles, with formal land registration largely confined to government and church plots. There are no branded housing estates, apartment complexes or organised real-estate businesses in the distrik. Wider Highland Papua property dynamics are shaped almost entirely by government, education and church spending on facilities and staff housing, with commercial real estate effectively confined to the larger highland towns such as Wamena.
Rental and investment outlook
Rental and investment activity in Alama in any conventional sense is essentially absent. The very small stock of rentable accommodation comprises simple rooms and houses let to posted teachers, health workers, security personnel and a handful of NGO and church staff. Investment interest in a Nduga distrik of this profile is generally not framed as residential yield but as long-horizon engagement through education, health, agricultural and church partnerships, often via Indonesian non-profit and government programmes. The wider Highland Papua economy is dominated by sweet potato gardens, pig husbandry, government transfers and small-scale trade. Foreign investors are bound by Indonesian land-ownership rules and by particular sensitivities around Papuan adat rights; any engagement here should respect customary clan authority and recognise the prevailing security and authorisation environment.
Practical tips
Alama is reached almost entirely by air, via small mission and government airstrips that connect Nduga distrik to Wamena and onward to Jayapura, supplemented in places by mountain footpaths between adjacent valleys; there is no realistic overland route from coastal Papua. The climate is montane tropical, cool to cold by Indonesian standards, with frequent cloud and rain throughout the year and a mild seasonal rhythm typical of the central New Guinea highlands. The dominant local languages are Nduga and related highland Papuan languages alongside Indonesian, and Christianity is the majority religion, with church networks providing much of the social infrastructure. Basic services such as puskesmas primary healthcare and primary schools exist at the kampung level, but referral to larger hospitals and any specialist services means travel to Wamena or Jayapura. Visitors must check current security and travel-permission requirements.

