Lotia – small highland settlement in Kecamatan Kurima, Kabupaten Yahukimo
Lotia is a tiny, difficult-to-access highland settlement in Highland Papua (Indonesian: Papua Pegunungan) province of Indonesia. Administratively, it forms part of Kecamatan Kurima, which belongs to Kabupaten Yahukimo. Based on its coordinates (-4.4939717, 139.5279996), it is situated in the interior highland region of Papua south of the equator, near the Central Range. No independent, settlement-level public sources are available for Lotia; therefore, the following description is based on verifiable data and general characteristics available at the regency and provincial level, which is indicated throughout.
General overview
Lotia is one of the settlements in Kecamatan Kurima, which administratively belongs to Kabupaten Yahukimo. Kabupaten Yahukimo is one of the largest in area yet most sparsely populated regencies of Papua Pegunungan province: the regency's recorded population in mid-2024 was 355,612 inhabitants, with a population density of merely 21 persons/km², indicating an extremely dispersed settlement structure consisting of small villages, some of which are accessible only by many hours of walking. The regency seat is formally located in Sumohai district, but due to infrastructure constraints, temporary government administration has continued to operate in Dekai district to this day. This alone reveals much about the area's level of development and accessibility. Kecamatan Kurima — of which Lotia is part — is located in the interior highland areas, where life is traditionally based on agriculture, primarily sweet potato and other cultivation crops, as well as small livestock farming. Papuan highland communities are typically characterized by close tribal and clan ties, and living conditions, availability of supply systems, and infrastructure differ substantially from Indonesian averages. In the case of Lotia — based on available sources — precise population figures, area data, or institutions present in the village cannot be specified.
Real estate and investment
No independent, reliable market data is available on the real estate market of Lotia and Kecamatan Kurima. Kabupaten Yahukimo as a whole — and more broadly, the interior highland regions of Papua Pegunungan province — possess significantly lower levels of infrastructure compared to more developed Indonesian areas, narrower market activity, and extremely limited investor presence. In this type of difficult-to-access highland village, real estate transactions are characteristically not evident by data, and sales do not take place within organized market frameworks but rather according to local customs and tribal land-ownership systems. According to general regulations applicable throughout Indonesia, foreign nationals cannot hold full ownership rights (Hak Milik) to real estate; for them, so-called Hak Pakai (usage rights) or long-term rental constructions are available, though their conditions in practice present serious restrictions, particularly in interior Papuan areas. From an investment perspective, Kabupaten Yahukimo — and within it Kecamatan Kurima — is currently not considered an active or developing real estate market; the region's economic movements are primarily shaped by local needs, state infrastructure development, and internal migration processes.
Safety and security
No concrete, settlement-level statistical data is available on the public safety situation in Lotia. Regarding Papua Pegunungan province, and particularly interior highland regencies such as Kabupaten Yahukimo, Indonesian authorities and regional analysts generally draw attention to the occasional presence of tribal conflicts, which in interior Papuan areas — due to scarce resources, tribal boundary disputes, and reportedly difficult terrain conditions — sometimes occur. In the Papuan highlands, the accessibility and response time of law enforcement may be limited due to difficult infrastructure conditions. In certain Papuan areas of Indonesia, political tensions are also present; therefore, before planning travel to such interior areas, it is advisable to consult relevant official advisories. However, regarding Lotia, no concrete, verifiable data on criminal or security incidents is publicly available.
Tourist attractions
No sources are available documenting named tourist attractions, natural or cultural sites for Lotia and Kecamatan Kurima. The broader area of Kabupaten Yahukimo lies near the Papuan Central Range, where the region's natural endowments — steep hillsides, dense tropical rainforests, deep valleys, and highland rivers — represent significant natural-geographic value in themselves, though these are not yet accessible within an organized tourism infrastructure framework. Interior Papuan areas in general generate anthropological interest regarding proto-Papuan culture, the traditions, clothing, and rituals of local Lani, Yali, and other ethnic groups; however, this type of interest requires special permits, assistance from local guides, and the consent of the affected communities. No specific attractions relating concretely to Lotia can be named from available sources.
Summary
Lotia is a small highland settlement in Kecamatan Kurima of Kabupaten Yahukimo, in Highland Papua province, for which independent, publicly available documentation is currently not available. Based on data known at the regency level — merely 21 persons/km² population density, limited infrastructure, and accessibility difficulties for the administrative seat — Lotia is one of the isolated communities of Indonesia's interior highland areas based on traditional livelihoods. The region possesses neither organized markets nor infrastructure from tourist nor real estate investment perspectives, and no concrete, verifiable data is available regarding public safety. The place is primarily relevant for travelers interested in Papuan interior areas who are informed and well-prepared, and who carefully weigh available official advisories and local conditions in advance.

