Mugi – small settlement in the highland interior of Yahukimo Regency
Mugi is a small Indonesian settlement located in Highland Papua (Papua Pegunungan) Province, within Yahukimo Regency (Kabupaten Yahukimo), belonging to Wusama District (Kecamatan Wusama). Based on its coordinates (-4.2980378, 139.0184902), it is situated in the interior mountainous areas of the island of Papua, in the vicinity of the deeply dissected ranges of the Jayawijaya Mountains. Yahukimo Regency became an independent regency from an administrative standpoint on December 11, 2002, previously forming part of Jayawijaya Regency. No independent, settlement-level data sources are available for Mugi; the region is presented below based on the broader regency-level context.
General overview
Mugi is a tiny, scattered mountainous village in Wusama District that is difficult to access. Considering Yahukimo Regency as a whole, it can be said that the region has extremely sparse infrastructure: the regency's official administrative center is Sumohai, which due to infrastructural deficiencies performs administrative functions only in a limited capacity; in reality, Dekai serves as the regency's actual administrative and commercial hub. The territory of Yahukimo Regency covers 17,152 km², with more than 350,000 inhabitants in 2020 — compared to the 2010 figure of 164,512 residents, the population more than doubled over the ten-year period, and by mid-2022, official estimates indicated 361,776 inhabitants. This rapid population growth characterizes the region as a whole; however, interior mountainous villages — such as Mugi — remain extremely sparsely populated and isolated in terms of road and air connectivity. No independent statistical data is known for Wusama District and Mugi, therefore the above reflects solely the regency-level context.
Real estate and investment
No real estate market data is available for Mugi and its immediate surroundings, and Wusama District is not recognized as a known investment destination. At the broader Yahukimo Regency level, it can be stated that the region's real estate market is extremely underdeveloped: due to difficult accessibility, low infrastructural levels, and limited economic activity, formalized real estate transactions are virtually not characteristic of interior mountainous villages. Indonesian land ownership regulations generally impose strict frameworks for foreign nationals: foreign individuals cannot acquire full ownership rights (Hak Milik), though long-term use, lease, or investment title rights (such as Hak Pakai, Hak Guna Bangunan) are available under specified conditions. However, in the interior regions of Papua Province, customary law and tribal land use (adat) are so predominant that they can only be fitted into formal investment structures with difficulty. Based on all these factors, Mugi and its surrounding area are currently not considered relevant target areas for either domestic or foreign real estate investments.
Safety and security
No specific, verifiable data is available regarding Mugi's public safety. The broader Highland Papua Province — and particularly certain interior regencies, including the Jayawijaya Mountains region — has faced complex security challenges in recent decades: tribal conflicts and difficult living conditions resulting from isolation occasionally generate tensions. Indonesian authorities and certain travel operators and foreign affairs offices periodically draw attention to the fact that travel to interior Papuan areas requires heightened care. Since no specific public safety assessment is available for Mugi and Wusama District, the above provides only a general, fragmented description of the broader region; no concrete judgment regarding local conditions can be formed on this basis.
Tourist attractions
No named tourist attractions or attractions recorded for travelers are known for Mugi and Wusama District. Yahukimo Regency as a whole is fundamentally outside the scope of organized tourism: due to the region's difficult accessibility, missing tourist infrastructure, and occasionally limited freedom of movement, travel for tourism purposes is extremely rare. The mountainous areas of the broader Highland Papua Province are generally known for the spectacular natural world of the Jayawijaya Mountains and the unique culture of indigenous Papuan communities; however, tourism-level access to these is possible only within organized frameworks in other, better-equipped parts of the region (such as the Wamena area). In the case of Mugi, therefore, neither natural nor cultural attractions can be identified concretely and substantiated by sources.
Summary
Mugi is a tiny, difficult-to-access mountainous settlement in Wusama District of Yahukimo Regency, in Highland Papua Province. According to regency-level data, the region has undergone rapid population growth over the past decade; however, infrastructure and formalized economic life in interior mountainous villages remain highly limited. Since no independent source material is available for the settlement itself, no reliable, detailed assessment can be provided regarding real estate markets, tourism, or public safety — the relationships discussed above are all understood at the level of the broader regency and province.

