Borot – a small kampung in Kabupaten Nduga Yigi district with limited infrastructure
Borot is a kampung (village-level administrative unit) in Indonesia's Papua Pegunungan (Highland Papua) province, belonging to Kabupaten Nduga Yigi district. Geographically, it is located in the interior of the Papuan highlands, and based on its coordinates (–4.41° south latitude, 138.24° east longitude), it sits in the densely forested, difficult-to-access Jayawijaya mountain region. Kabupaten Nduga is one of Indonesia's least developed regencies, where infrastructure and public service availability are generally at low levels. Borot itself reflects this situation: according to Wikipedia sources, only five households have electricity from non-state network sources, while 84 households live entirely without electricity.
General overview
Borot is one of the kampungs in Yigi district, and the only specific, settlement-level data found in verified sources concerns the lack of electricity: 84 households in the kampung have no access to electricity whatsoever, and only 5 households have electricity from non-PLN network sources (the state electricity provider) – from alternative sources such as generators or solar panels. This ratio clearly illustrates the kampung's infrastructural situation. Kabupaten Nduga generally ranks in the lower range of Indonesian development indicators: healthcare and education systems, road infrastructure, and communication networks lag behind the national average. Borot does not appear in available sources as a location known for tourism or economic significance, and its connection to the outside world is limited. As a kampung, it is assumed to be based on agricultural and subsistence-based community economies, as is characteristic of much of Kabupaten Nduga.
Real estate and investment
No public, settlement-level real estate market data is currently available for Borot. Looking at the broader context – that of Kabupaten Nduga and Papua Pegunungan province – it can be stated that in the interior areas of the Papuan highlands, particularly in difficult-to-access, infrastructurally underdeveloped zones, the real estate market is extremely limited and informal in nature. Formal property registration, land registries, and developed real estate market activity typically do not develop in such rural, isolated areas. Under Indonesia's general land ownership regulations, foreigners cannot hold full ownership rights (Hak Milik) over property in Indonesia; the so-called Hak Pakai (use rights) is the primary form available to them, with conditions dependent on relevant national legislation. In Borot and similar kampungs in Kabupaten Nduga, however, property transactions – if they exist at all – are almost exclusively limited to customary law (adat) based transactions within local communities. From an investment perspective, the kampung is not currently considered an active real estate target area, and no commercial or tourism-related development activity is known from here.
Safety and security
No settlement-level public safety statistics or police data regarding Borot are available in verified sources. Regarding Kabupaten Nduga and the broader Papuan highlands region, it is widely known that Indonesian authorities, the press, and various human rights organizations regularly report security challenges linked to low infrastructural development, limitations of state presence, and active armed conflicts in certain parts of the region. Certain zones of Papua Pegunungan province – including Kabupaten Nduga – are classified variably according to authorities and foreign government travel warnings, and the security situation can be periodically unstable. No verifiable factual data exists regarding Borot's specific security situation; visitors planning to travel to the kampung are advised to consult with relevant Indonesian authorities and current travel advisories.
Tourist attractions
No named tourist attraction linked to Borot kampung appears in verified sources. The broader Kabupaten Nduga and Papuan highlands region are extraordinarily visually striking from a natural geography perspective – the prominent peaks of the Jayawijaya mountain range (also known as the Maoke mountain range), including Puncak Jaya, Indonesia's highest point, are known natural features of the region. However, these attractions can be connected to areas neighboring Kabupaten Nduga and other highland zones, and source-based data regarding their exact distance from Borot is not available. The kampung's accessibility is also limited: Kabupaten Nduga is generally reached by air via nearby small airfields, as road infrastructure is poorly developed. Tourist infrastructure – accommodation, food service, organized programs – is unlikely in the kampung given the circumstances, and no source-based data on such facilities is known.
Summary
Borot is a small, infrastructurally underdeveloped kampung in Indonesia's Papua Pegunungan province, in Kabupaten Nduga Yigi district. The most important source-supported fact about the kampung concerns its near-total lack of electricity: of 84 households, only five have access to electricity from non-state network sources. The kampung is not considered a known or active destination from either tourism or real estate market perspectives, and its accessibility is limited by the region's infrastructural conditions. The broader Kabupaten Nduga context – low development indicators, security challenges, difficult accessibility – applies generally to Borot as well, though detailed, sector-specific data regarding the kampung remain not yet publicly available.

