Leinoko – a small highland settlement in Kabupaten Yahukimo, Highland Papua province
Leinoko is a settlement belonging to the Pasema district (kecamatan) and situated on the territory of Kabupaten Yahukimo, classified by Indonesian administration as part of the Highland Papua (Papua Pegunungan) province. Based on its coordinates (-4.41° southern latitude, 139.11° eastern longitude), it is located on the eastern part of the Jayawijaya mountain range system, in Papua's interior highlands. As no direct, settlement-level sources are available for the village, the description below necessarily builds on verifiable data known at the province and region level, applying these as a framework for Leinoko.
General overview
Leinoko is a poorly documented, tiny highland village for which no publicly available detailed statistics exist. Based on its location in Pasema district, it forms part of the administrative territory of Kabupaten Yahukimo, which is one of the most remote and least accessible regions of the Highland Papua province – formerly known as Papua Pegunungan Tengah. The province was established as an independent province on June 30, 2022, following Law No. 16 then taking effect in Indonesia, when three new provinces were created from the former Papua province: Highland Papua (Papua Pegunungan), South Papua (Papua Selatan), and Central Papua (Papua Tengah). A distinctive geographical characteristic of the province is that it is Indonesia's only province with no coastline whatsoever – it is a completely landlocked, interior territorial unit. Communities living in the region have traditionally engaged in tuber-crop cultivation, primarily sweet potato farming and pig husbandry, in terrain that includes high mountains and deep valleys. Various ethnic groups belonging to the La Pago customary law and cultural area have inhabited these valleys for centuries. Leinoko village likely conforms to this local community structure based on traditional ways of life, but no concrete, verifiable data is available on this matter.
Real estate and investment
No publicly released, specific real estate market data is accessible regarding Leinoko and the Pasema district as a whole. The broader context – namely the real estate situation in Kabupaten Yahukimo and Highland Papua province – can be characterized as follows: in the interior areas of Papua's highlands, real estate transactions are extremely limited, infrastructure conditions – roads, public services, communications – are inadequate, and this substantially constrains investment interest as well. Under the generally applicable framework of Indonesian land ownership regulations, foreign private individuals cannot acquire direct (hak milik type) real estate ownership in Indonesia; various long-term leasehold forms and construction titles are available for their use within the legal framework. In Papua province and the new Papua provinces, land and real estate transactions may become more complex than usual due to the customary law (adat) land ownership system, which also protects traditional community property forms. All real estate transactions in the province should be examined with the involvement of local legal experts.
Safety and security
No published public safety statistics are available regarding Leinoko, so only the generally applicable situation for the region can be described. In certain areas of Highland Papua province – particularly in its interior, hard-to-reach districts – there has been a low-intensity but periodically intensifying security tension present for years, which is connected to Papuan independence movements and local tribal conflicts. Kabupaten Yahukimo has previously appeared in reports covering local security events, so persons planning to visit or travel there are advised to monitor travel advisories issued by Indonesian authorities and their own country's foreign affairs offices. Specific crime statistics or incident lists cannot be provided from available sources, and it would not be justified to present such data without verification.
Tourist attractions
Available, verified source materials do not contain tourist attractions specifically identified with Leinoko or Pasema district, so the following addresses known attractions in the broader province, clearly indicating that these are regional rather than local data. For Highland Papua province as a whole, the most documented and best-known site is Baliem Valley (Lembah Baliem), which is renowned for its traditional festival. This valley is the province's most culturally and touristically significant area, where Papuan indigenous communities annually hold the so-called Baliem Valley Festival. Additionally, the ranges of the Jayawijaya mountain system and certain of its high peaks – such as Puncak Mandala and Puncak Trikora – are counted among the province's natural attractions. However, these locations are at considerable distance from Leinoko, and precise numerical data on associated infrastructure cannot be provided. The nature-oriented character and cultural diversity of the highland Papuan interior regions is itself distinctive of the area, but no specifically factual tourism-related information regarding Leinoko can be identified from the sources.
Summary
Leinoko is a small highland settlement barely documented from external sources, located in Kabupaten Yahukimo in one of the interior districts of Highland Papua province, which became independent in 2022. The province is characterized by being landlocked, divided by mountains and valleys, and inhabited by communities with traditional ways of life, where infrastructure and transportation connections are limited. From the perspectives of real estate market, tourism, and public safety, only the general frameworks applicable to the broader region provide guidance, since no independent, verifiable data currently exists for Leinoko.

