Paleromon – a small Papuan highland settlement in Talambo District
Paleromon is a small settlement in Indonesia's Highland Papua (Papua Pegunungan) Province, which falls under the administrative unit of Kabupaten Yahukimo and, within it, Talambo District (kecamatan). Based on its coordinates (approximately 3.7°S, 140.1°E), it is located in Papua's interior mountainous area, far removed from the infrastructure of coastal cities. Kabupaten Yahukimo is one of Indonesia's most remote and difficult to access regencies; administratively, its ibu kota (capital) is formally located in Sumohai District, though routine government operations are conducted from the better-serviced Dekai District. Paleromon itself does not appear as a separate entry in publicly accessible sources, so the information below relies on verifiable data and general knowledge at the broader regency and province level, with this noted in all relevant places.
General overview
Paleromon belongs to Talambo District, which is one of many small, scattered highland communities in Kabupaten Yahukimo. The regency as a whole, as part of Highland Papua Province, is considered one of Indonesia's most sparsely populated areas: according to mid-2024 data, the total population of Kabupaten Yahukimo was 355,612 people, with a population density of just 21 people/km², indicating that individual villages and settlements in the area have small populations and are located at greater distances from one another. A significant proportion of the communities living in the region exist within the framework of traditional, subsistence-based agriculture and forest-dwelling, mountainous lifestyles. No separate, detailed public statistical or descriptive sources are available for Talambo District or Paleromon itself, so the above characteristics of the settlement reflect general features of the regency and do not necessarily represent data specifically verifiable for Paleromon. The broader kabupaten area is characterized by steep mountain ridges, dense tropical forests, and relatively few paved roads; most smaller communities are connected to the outside world through air transport—small aircraft and helicopters—or difficult terrain accessible only by foot paths.
Real estate and investment
No separate real estate market data is publicly available for Paleromon and Talambo District, so the information below reflects only the general context at the level of Kabupaten Yahukimo and Highland Papua Province. Characteristic of the region as a whole is an extremely limited and opaque real estate market: the strong presence of traditional communal, tribal, and customary (adat) land ownership complicates formal real estate transactions, and land registry records are not evenly extended across the entire area. Indonesia's land ownership regulations establish a general framework stipulating that foreign nationals cannot acquire full ownership rights (hak milik) over land or property in Indonesia; typically, lease arrangements or hak pakai (usage rights) forms are available to them, and these are generally time-limited solutions tied to administrative authorization. In the broader Papuan highland region, investment activity manifests almost exclusively in the form of state and NGO infrastructure development and expansion of basic services, rather than in private capital investment. On this basis, Paleromon cannot be considered an active or developed area from a real estate investment perspective based on currently available information.
Safety and security
No systematic, reliable data is available regarding public safety in Paleromon. Generally speaking, with respect to the broader Kabupaten Yahukimo and Highland Papua Province, the region is one of Indonesia's least integrated and most remote areas, where state presence—including law enforcement infrastructure—is limited, and local tensions and tribal disputes among various communities do occasionally occur. This does not mean that Paleromon or its surroundings is particularly dangerous for visitors, but the access difficulties, low level of infrastructural development, and characteristics of community life in themselves require careful planning by those visiting the area. Any excursion or stay in the region is best thoroughly prepared in advance, in consultation with local contacts or the relevant authorities. In the absence of specific crime statistics or incident records, further settlement-level public safety-specific statements cannot be made on a sound basis.
Tourist attractions
Currently available sources do not contain named tourist attractions specific to Paleromon, nor is such data available for Talambo District. The generally known natural characteristics of the broader Kabupaten Yahukimo and Highland Papua Province—steep mountainous terrain, dense rainforests, river valleys, and material heritage of Papuan indigenous cultures—are theoretically present throughout the region; however, any possible visits to these in Talambo District could only be conceived of with serious logistical preparation and local assistance. The Papua Highlands region as a whole may be of interest to serious hikers and those interested in cultural anthropology, but the reception infrastructure built for tourists in the region is extremely limited. Dekai, which functions as the capital of Kabupaten Yahukimo, is the only point within the regency with an airstrip that regularly receives smaller aircraft and where minimal-level services are available—this is at a considerable distance from Paleromon both as the crow flies and especially by road or foot paths, though precise distance data cannot be provided due to lack of sources.
Summary
Paleromon is a small, barely documented highland community in Talambo District, Kabupaten Yahukimo, in Highland Papua Province. Based on regency-level data, the area is extremely sparsely populated terrain with limited infrastructure and difficult access, where traditional lifestyles and the natural environment predominate. From a real estate market perspective, external investor activity is not characteristic, and regarding public safety and local attractions, no verifiable, systematic sources are available from which specific statements could be drawn. Those interested in the region should undertake thorough research and consult with local authorities.

