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    Home/Indonesia/Highland Papua/Yahukimo/Kosarek/Mine

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    Kosarek, Yahukimo, Highland Papua

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    About Mine

    Mine – small highland settlement in the isolated Kosarek District of Kabupaten Yahukimo

    Mine is a small settlement (kampung) in the eastern part of Indonesia, in the highland interior regions of the island of Papua. It is one of the kampungs belonging to Kosarek District, which also includes Hombuka, Illion, Konosa, Nahomas, Silkom, Tiple, Uldam, Wahe, and Wesaltek among others. From an administrative perspective, Mine belongs to Kabupaten Yahukimo, and within that to Highland Papua (Papua Pegunungan) province. Highland Papua province was established on July 25, 2022, from the central and highland portions of the former Papua province, and is Indonesia's only landlocked province, that is, its only inland province. Mine's coordinates are −4.1053319 latitude north, 139.5101838 longitude east, which places the settlement in the zone of the Jayawijaya mountain range.

    General overview

    Mine is a poorly documented small highland kampung, for which independent settlement-level source material is not available. At the broader level of Kosarek District and Kabupaten Yahukimo, however, numerous general characteristics can be reliably described. In Kosarek District, the Kosarek people (also known as Kosarek Yale or Mek Kosarek) speak a Papuan language. Alongside the Mek tribe – which inhabits Nalca, Kosarek, and Nipsan districts – Kabupaten Yahukimo is also home to groups such as the Yali (Yalimek), Hupla, Kimyal, Momuna, Una, Ngalik, Korowai, Diuwe, Obini, Kopkaka, and Bese. Mine thus lies in a region where the traditional presence of the Mek ethnic group is significant. The kabupaten's climate is tropical wet, with varied topography; elevation ranges between 100 and 3,500 meters above sea level, and approximately 60% of the area is highland, of which 90% is still forest-covered. The climate is generally tropical rainforest (Af) and subtropical highland (Cfb) type, with high precipitation; annual rainfall ranges between 2,500 and 4,000 mm. In mid-2024, Kabupaten Yahukimo's population was 355,612 people, with a population density of 21 persons/km². This low population density illustrates well that Mine and its surroundings are an extremely sparsely inhabited, difficult-to-access highland area.

    Real estate and investment

    For Mine, independent settlement-level real estate market data is not available; the following reflect the broader context of Kabupaten Yahukimo and Highland Papua province. Forest covers 90% of the kabupaten's area, and the local economy is sustained primarily by agriculture, particularly food crop cultivation. In the Kosarek area, forest coconut and red fruit (buah merah) are also grown, considered as potential agricultural commodities, and the lands there may also be suitable for coffee, cocoa, vanilla, and palm oil cultivation. The Yahukimo territory lying on the ridge of the Jayawijaya mountain range may harbor crude oil, coal, and limestone reserves. These resources can be evaluated from a raw material extraction perspective, but developments are currently limited due to difficult accessibility. Under Indonesian land ownership regulations, foreign private individuals cannot acquire direct ownership rights (Hak Milik) in Indonesia; for them, the frameworks of Hak Pakai (usage rights) and Hak Sewa (lease rights) are available, which are generally regulated by the Indonesian legal system. Numerous areas of the kabupaten are terpencil (remote) and accessible only by aircraft. This circumstance seriously affects the investment conditions and real estate market development for Mine and Kosarek District alike.

    Safety and security

    For Mine settlement, detailed, reliable statistics regarding public security are not available. However, verifiable context can be provided regarding the broader region. In Highland Papua province, violent acts connected to the activities of the pro-independence Free Papua Organization (OPM) have occurred, including for example a 1996 hostage situation in Mapenduma, the killing of construction workers in Nduga in 2018, and the burning of schools and health facilities in Pegunungan Bintang Regency. This generally indicates that certain highland areas of the province may harbor security risks, although their intensity varies by area. Certain areas of the province are also sensitive to extraordinary cold-induced frost, which presents serious danger to agriculture and in severe cases can lead to famine. The delivery of aid to these areas is greatly hindered by minimal infrastructure. On this basis, Mine and the surrounding Kosarek District area should be regarded as a territory fraught with challenges both in terms of accessibility and supply; visitors are advised to monitor current official travel recommendations.

    Tourist attractions

    For Mine, source data concerning named tourist attractions or sights is not available. However, the following can be verified at the Kabupaten Yahukimo level. Two locations on the kabupaten's territory are known among those interested in trekking: Kurima and Anggruk. These district centers belong to administrative units different from Mine and Kosarek District, so their distance from Mine is considerable even as the crow flies. Highland Papua province offers a landscape marked by deep valleys and massive mountain peaks, where adventure seekers can visit traditional villages in which elements of ancient settlement culture and lifestyle remain to this day. In Kosarek District, the traditional culture and language of the Yale (Mek) people constitute in themselves a unique meeting point for the interested, but its tourist infrastructure is extremely underdeveloped. Numerous settlements in the region are accessible only by aircraft, which fundamentally determines the logistical feasibility of tourist visits.

    Summary

    Mine is a small, difficult-to-access highland kampung in Indonesia's Highland Papua province, in Kosarek District of Kabupaten Yahukimo. Kabupaten Yahukimo covers nearly 16,366 km² and has 51 districts, among which Kosarek District is one of the traditional settlement territories of the Mek (Yale) ethnic group. Independent, verifiable data about Mine are scarcely available; due to the region's difficult infrastructural conditions, high forest coverage, and isolated highland location, it cannot be classified among developed regions from either a tourist or investment perspective. On this basis, Mine may represent a destination primarily for travelers and researchers who are specifically interested in secluded Papuan highland cultures and are aware of the logistical and security challenges involved.


    More about Kosarek

    Kosarek – Highland distrik in Yahukimo Regency, Highland PapuaKosarek is a distrik in Yahukimo Regency, Highland Papua Province (Papua Pegunungan), in the central mountains of New…

    Kosarek – Highland distrik in Yahukimo Regency, Highland Papua

    Kosarek is a distrik in Yahukimo Regency, Highland Papua Province (Papua Pegunungan), in the central mountains of New Guinea. According to the Indonesian Wikipedia entry for the district and data from the Ministry of Home Affairs cited there, Kosarek had a population of 6,371 in 2020 — 3,457 males and 2,914 females — across an area of 308 km², giving a density of about 21 people per square kilometre. The distrik comprises 11 kampung and is bordered by Nipsan to the north, Puldama to the east, Nalca to the south, and Ubahak and Yahuliambut to the west. The regency name Yahukimo itself is an acronym of the four indigenous peoples of the area — Yali, Hubla, Kimyal and Momuna.

    Tourism and attractions

    Kosarek is not a developed tourism destination and is rarely featured in Indonesian travel publicity. Yahukimo Regency, of which Kosarek is part, is shaped by rugged central-highland landscapes, deep valleys, montane forest and small indigenous settlements often reached only by light aircraft. Cultural life across the regency is rooted in Yali, Hubla, Kimyal and Momuna communities, with distinctive traditional dress, oral literature and agricultural systems centred on sweet potato, taro and small livestock. According to data cited in the Wikipedia entry, roughly 99.73 per cent of residents in Kosarek are Christian (99.52 per cent Protestant, 0.21 per cent Catholic), and church life is a major organising feature of kampung life. Visitors to the regency almost always arrive via Dekai, the regency capital, rather than directly to outlying districts like Kosarek.

    Property market

    Formal property market data for Kosarek is not available in web sources, and the distrik sits well outside the main Indonesian real estate market. Typical housing consists of traditional honai-derived family homes, small timber churches and a handful of masonry buildings for distrik offices, schools and clinics. Land is overwhelmingly held under adat by clans of the Yali, Hubla, Kimyal and Momuna communities, with very limited formal certification. Commercial property is essentially absent apart from very small kiosks and government-supported kampung stores. Wider real estate dynamics in Highland Papua are concentrated around Wamena and Dekai as regional service hubs; distriks such as Kosarek participate only through administrative presence, school and clinic placements, and periodic government logistics.

    Rental and investment outlook

    There is effectively no formal rental market in Kosarek. Any rental-type activity is limited to small rooms at the distrik office or mission complexes used by teachers, nurses and posted officials. Investment interest in districts of this profile is typically best approached through land rather than residential rental yield, with roadside commercial plots and agricultural parcels the most common small-scale asset classes. Broader real estate dynamics are tied to the wider provincial economy, so commodity cycles, infrastructure projects and regulatory changes all feed through to demand. Foreign investors are bound by Indonesian rules on land ownership and should work with a local notary and the regency land office for every transaction. In Highland Papua specifically, land transfer to outside parties is effectively limited by adat and Special Autonomy arrangements, and logistics are dominated by costly air charters, so most economic investment takes the form of agricultural support, church-related activity and government service provision rather than property development.

    Practical tips

    Kosarek is reached principally by light aircraft from Dekai, Wamena or Jayapura, with limited overland travel to neighbouring distriks along mountain paths. The climate is tropical and humid year round, typical of Papua, with heavy rainfall and lush vegetation shaping daily life. Yahukimo residents rely primarily on subsistence farming of sweet potato, taro, cassava and sago, with coffee, buah merah and pig husbandry also widely practised. Basic services such as puskesmas primary healthcare clinics, mosques or churches, schools and small daily markets are available locally, while larger hospitals, banks and government offices sit in the regency capital. Visitors should dress modestly in villages and places of worship, greet local officials on arrival, and plan for simple accommodation rather than international hotel standards. Indonesian regulations on foreign land ownership apply across the district, and formal land transactions should involve the regency land office and a notary. Travellers must plan for unpredictable weather-dependent flight schedules, limited mobile-data coverage and basic accommodation generally provided by churches, mission guesthouses or village hosts.

    More about Yahukimo

    Yahukimo – Papua's High Valleys and Tribal Heartland Yahukimo is one of the most remote regencies in Indonesia, covering the rugged Jayawijaya mountain range and the upper Star…

    Yahukimo – Papua's High Valleys and Tribal Heartland

    Yahukimo is one of the most remote regencies in Indonesia, covering the rugged Jayawijaya mountain range and the upper Star Mountain foothills in Highland Papua province. The district capital, Dekai, is accessible almost exclusively by small aircraft from Wamena or Jayapura; sealed road connections are negligible, and the terrain of steep ridges, fast rivers, and dense rainforest makes overland travel arduous even in the dry season. Home to the Yali, Hubula (Dani), and Korowai peoples, the regency spans extraordinary cultural and ecological diversity across an area larger than many provinces.

    What to See and Do

    Yahukimo's draws are ethnographic and natural rather than touristic in the conventional sense. Mission airstrips at Anggruk, Sela, Ninia, and Suru-Suru in the upper Yalimo valleys serve as the only lifelines for remote communities. Traditional Yali and Hubula honai (round thatched roundhouses) and koteka culture remain visible in daily life. The southern lowlands of Yahukimo are home to the Korowai, one of the few peoples whose traditional longhouses are built in the canopy of large trees. Highland trekking along ancient trade paths connects villages between the Baliem Valley and the Yahukimo interior.

    Local Cuisine

    Bakar batu — the stone-cooking ceremony in which heated river rocks are placed in a pit layered with pork, sweet potato, leafy greens, and banana leaves — is the most important communal feast across the Papuan highlands, held at weddings, funerals, and inter-clan gatherings. Hipere (sweet potato, in dozens of local varieties) is the daily staple of highland communities. In the lowland Korowai areas, sago is processed from wild palms and forms the dietary base alongside river fish and forest game.

    Real Estate Market

    There is virtually no formal rental market in Yahukimo. A handful of mission guesthouses, NGO staff housing compounds, and government-issue quarters in Dekai are the only accommodation options for outsiders. Visitors — typically researchers, missionaries, aid workers, and adventure travellers — arrange stays directly with mission organisations or local church networks well in advance of arrival. Yahukimo is not a tourist-rental destination in any conventional sense; it is a destination for those with a serious interest in ethnography, highland ecology, or rugged exploration.

    More about Highland Papua

    Highland Papua (Papua Pegunungan) is the province of the Baliem Valley and Papuan highland cultures. Wamena is the capital and trekking hub; Dani and Lani villages, the traditional…

    Highland Papua (Papua Pegunungan) is the province of the Baliem Valley and Papuan highland cultures. Wamena is the capital and trekking hub; Dani and Lani villages, the traditional "smoke women" custom, and mountain scenery offer a unique experience. The province was created in 2022 when Papua was split.

    Where is Highland Papua?

    The province is located in the central highlands of Papua. Wamena is reachable by air from Jayapura (and sometimes Bali). The Baliem Valley is the heart of the province; villages are reached by trekking or local transport. Roads and flights are weather-dependent.

    What to See?

    1. Baliem Valley – Dani and Lani Villages

    The Baliem Valley is home to the Dani and Lani people. Traditional round houses, sweet potato gardens, and local markets (e.g. Jiwika) offer an authentic insight. Valley treks can last 1–5 days.

    2. Wamena – Gateway to the Highlands

    Wamena is the center of the Baliem Valley, with markets, accommodation, and trek organizers. The city is the starting point for Dani culture. The airport and local infrastructure serve tourism.

    3. "Smoke Women" and Traditional Customs

    In Dani communities the traditional "smoke women" custom (women who stay in huts and are exposed to smoke) can still be observed in some villages. Local guidance and respect are important.

    4. Mountain Treks and Viewpoints

    The mountains and gorges around the Baliem Valley offer trekking routes. The Wamena–Kurima–Wamena loop and other routes allow 2–4 day treks. The landscape is stunning.

    5. Baliem Festival

    The annual Baliem Festival (around August) attracts visitors with tribal games, dances, and (simulated) traditional warfare. Check the exact date in advance.

    When to Visit?

    May–October is the drier period; flights are more reliable and treks more comfortable. The August Baliem Festival is popular. In the rainy season flights often delay or cancel.

    How Long to Stay?

    4–6 days recommended:

    • 1 day: Wamena, markets, surroundings
    • 2–3 days: Baliem Valley trek, Dani villages
    • 1 day: other villages or rest

    Renting or Investing in Highland Papua?

    If you're considering renting or investing in property in Highland Papua, these resources on our site can help you make informed decisions:

    • Indonesian Property FAQ – answers to the most common questions about renting and buying
    • Land Zoning Guide – understanding Indonesian land use regulations
    • Indonesian Real Estate Terminology – key terms explained
    • Property Guide – comprehensive guide to Indonesian real estate
    • Living in Indonesia – essential guide for expats

    Official Resources

    For further information about Highland Papua, these official sources may be helpful:

    • Indonesia Travel – official tourism portal
    • Highland Papua Provincial Government – regional government information
    • Bank Indonesia – currency and exchange rate data
    • BMKG – weather and climate information
    • Directorate General of Immigration – visa regulations for foreign visitors

    Summary

    Highland Papua is the region of the Baliem Valley and Dani/Lani culture. Wamena and valley treks provide an unforgettable, authentic experience.

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