Bebekle – a small highland village in the interior of Kabupaten Yahukimo
Bebekle is a small, remote settlement in the Highland Papua (Papua Pegunungan) province of Indonesia. Administratively, it belongs to the Langda district (kecamatan), which is part of Kabupaten Yahukimo. The official capital of the kabupaten is Sumohai district, though actual administrative operations currently proceed from Dekai district due to infrastructural limitations. Based on its coordinates (-4.47273; 139.39070), Bebekle is situated in the inaccessible mountainous interior of the kabupaten on the eastern side of the island of Papua.
General overview
Bebekle currently lacks a distinct, settlement-level public data source, so the characterization below is based on verified information available at the Kabupaten Yahukimo level. In mid-2024, Kabupaten Yahukimo had a population of approximately 355,612 with a population density of only 21 people per km², well reflecting the region's scattered, mountainous character. Bebekle similarly almost certainly falls into the category of small-population villages inhabited primarily by local Papuan communities. The Langda district, to which the settlement belongs, is one of the kabupaten's interior zones, typically characterized by difficult terrain accessibility. Infrastructure in the region—roads, public services, telecommunications—is generally underdeveloped, a common trait of similar highland villages. Local communities' livelihoods are traditionally based on agriculture, forestry, and subsistence farming, consistent with the general way of life in Papuan mountainous areas.
Real estate and investment
Settlement-specific real estate market data for Bebekle is not publicly available. Broader context is provided by the characteristics of Kabupaten Yahukimo and Highland Papua province: the region is extremely isolated, infrastructure is underdeveloped, and local economic activity is low, which also reflects the underdeveloped state of the real estate market. Across the kabupaten's territory—and especially in interior districts such as Langda—an organized real estate transaction market is not typical, and land use predominantly occurs in the form of customary-law-based communal land use. Under the general framework of Indonesian property law, foreign individuals cannot acquire full ownership rights (Hak Milik) over real property in Indonesia; under certain conditions, they may access the so-called Hak Pakai (usage right), though the practical application of such abstract legal constructs in the interior areas of Kabupaten Yahukimo is extremely limited. From an investment perspective, the region is interpretable at best within the framework of Indonesian development policy programs, where state infrastructure development—particularly the programs for the so-called "3T areas" (terdepan, terluar, tertinggal, referring to border, outlying, and underdeveloped regions)—might potentially alter the region's accessibility and economic potential over the long term.
Safety and security
No settlement-specific, location-based data is available regarding public safety in Bebekle. In general terms for Kabupaten Yahukimo and more broadly Highland Papua province, certain districts—particularly difficult-to-access mountainous interior areas—are classified by Indonesian authorities and international bodies as among the more complex security situations in the country. This background stems in part from persistent infrastructure deficiencies, limited state presence, and localized conflicts among highland communities. However, based on available general information sources, a precise security assessment specific to the location cannot be accurately determined from publicly accessible sources. Travelers and interested parties are advised to follow current advisories from Indonesian authorities and their own country's foreign ministries before planning travel to such interior Papuan areas.
Tourist attractions
No tourist attractions specifically named in available sources are documented for Bebekle. Kabupaten Yahukimo's territory lies within Papua island's mountainous interior regions, where the natural environment—dense tropical highland forests, deep valleys, and high-altitude plateaus—offers noteworthy natural features, though these cannot be identified for Bebekle from single sources. The broader territory of the kabupaten and the Papuan highlands as a whole are significant from cultural and ethnographic perspectives: the traditional culture, way of life, and built environment of local Papuan tribes are subjects of scientific and anthropological interest. Nevertheless, the available source material does not contain specific cultural or natural attractions tied to Bebekle or Langda district, so such details are not included in this article.
Summary
Bebekle is a difficult-to-access, small highland settlement in Langda district of Kabupaten Yahukimo, Highland Papua province. Kabupaten Yahukimo as a whole is a sparsely inhabited, less developed infrastructure area where approximately 355,612 people lived in mid-2024 with extremely low population density. Currently, no settlement-specific, location-based data is publicly available for the settlement; from tourism, real estate market, and public safety perspectives, it fits into the broader context of the kabupaten and province. Based on all this, Bebekle is better understood as one of the poorly documented representatives of the distinct, isolated world of Papuan mountainous interior areas rather than a known or typically visited location.

