Hombesaloma – small highland settlement in Yahukimo Regency, Papua
Hombesaloma is a tiny, poorly documented settlement in eastern Indonesia, located in Highland Papua (Indonesian: Papua Pegunungan) Province. Administratively, it belongs to Kayo District (Kecamatan Kayo), which falls under the authority of Kabupaten Yahukimo. Based on the settlement's approximate coordinates (-4.49° south latitude, 139.28° east longitude), it is situated in the remote, difficult-to-access interior regions of the Papuan highlands. According to administrative data regarding Kabupaten Yahukimo's designated district seat, the regency's formal capital is Sumohai District; however, due to infrastructural constraints, actual government functions currently concentrate in Dekai District.
General overview
Hombesaloma does not appear in broad Indonesian or international registries, and available sources provide no direct, settlement-level statistical data. The broader context for this location is provided by Kabupaten Yahukimo as a whole: the regency counted approximately 355,612 inhabitants in mid-2024, with a population density of merely 21 per km², reflecting the area's extremely sparse settlement and highland character. Under such conditions, Hombesaloma, like other villages in Kayo District, likely sustains a self-sufficient, small-community lifestyle with a predominantly indigenous Papuan population. In the interior Papuan highland regions, infrastructure is generally limited: road networks are often incomplete or seasonally impassable in many places, and access to electricity and telecommunications is similarly uneven. Since separate published data for Kayo District are not available in the sources consulted, the above observations follow from knowledge of Kabupaten Yahukimo as a whole and cannot always be directly extrapolated to a single small village.
Real estate and investment
No verifiable, publicly available data source exists regarding the real estate market in Hombesaloma and Kayo District. For Kabupaten Yahukimo as a whole, it can be said that the region is treated by the Indonesian government as one of the Papuan territories under special autonomous status in terms of development priorities, where the formalized real estate market is extremely underdeveloped due to infrastructural backwardness and sparse population density. According to the general framework of Indonesian land ownership regulations, foreign private individuals cannot acquire direct ownership rights (Hak Milik) to property in Indonesia; rather, they may use property at most on the basis of rights designated for specific purposes and durations (such as Hak Pakai or Hak Sewa). In the interior Papuan highlands, customary (adat) communal land tenure based on territorial principles is also a significant factor, further complicating the investment situation. On this basis, areas around Hombesaloma are not currently an active investment target for either domestic or foreign real estate market actors.
Safety and security
No unique public safety statistics or verifiable local law enforcement data exist for Hombesaloma. Regarding certain zones in Kabupaten Yahukimo and more broadly in Highland Papua Province, Indonesian authorities and the press have occasionally signaled in recent decades certain security challenges that may be generally characteristic of the interior Papuan highlands: these include tribal conflicts and law enforcement accessibility difficulties arising from difficult terrain. However, this is general regional context and cannot be directly extrapolated to Hombesaloma in the absence of specific data. For travelers, it is always advisable to review information from the Indonesian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, consular services of the traveler's own country, and local authorities prior to visiting interior Papuan highland regions, as the situation may vary over time and location.
Tourist attractions
Named tourist attractions for Hombesaloma do not appear in available sources. Kabupaten Yahukimo and Highland Papua Province as a whole possess the characteristic natural and cultural assets of Indonesia's highland Papua: topography, rainforests, and the presence of indigenous Papuan cultures potentially hold appeal for those interested in eco-tourism; however, these possibilities cannot be detailed precisely for the Hombesaloma area due to lack of sources. The region's tourism is fundamentally determined by infrastructural underdevelopment and difficult accessibility. Kabupaten Yahukimo is primarily known among researchers, journalists, development workers, and adventure tourists, but neither Kayo District nor Hombesaloma appears in broader Indonesian tourism publications as a notable attraction.
Summary
Hombesaloma is a small, poorly documented highland settlement in Kabupaten Yahukimo, Highland Papua Province, belonging to Kayo District. Based on available data, the settlement is located in an area typical of the interior Papuan highlands—sparsely populated and infrastructurally underdeveloped, where Kabupaten Yahukimo's average population density measured in mid-2024 was merely 21 per km². From real estate market, tourism, and public safety perspectives, no reliable separate data currently exist specific to Hombesaloma or Kayo District; therefore, for those interested, review of the broader regional context and current official information is recommended.

