Halifur – a small highland settlement on the Papua Highlands in Yalimo region
Halifur is a small settlement in Highland Papua (Papua Pegunungan) province in Indonesia, located in the interior mountainous region of the Papua Highlands. Administratively, it belongs to Abenaho District (kecamatan), which is part of Kabupaten Yalimo. The seat of this regency is located in Elelim District. Detailed public data specifically about Halifur are not available, so the following account relies on broader Kabupaten Yalimo–level data and general characteristics of the region, with clear indication that these describe the wider context.
General overview
Halifur is a tiny, mountainous settlement within Kabupaten Yalimo, for which broader public sources are not available. The kabupaten itself was established on January 4, 2008, under Law No. 4 of 2008, through which six new regencies were created in Papua province. Kabupaten Yalimo was separated from the neighboring, larger Kabupaten Jayawijaya and was officially proclaimed by Interior Minister Mardiyanto on June 21, 2008. The kabupaten takes its name from the Yali people living in the area and from Yalimu, the customary law territory they inhabit. According to data measured in mid-2024, the total population of Kabupaten Yalimo was 104,913, with a population density of only 33 people/km², illustrating that the region is extremely sparsely inhabited and largely covered by dense mountain rainforests and high mountain ridges. Halifur itself belongs to Abenaho District, for which detailed descriptions beyond regency-level administrative data are not available. Similar interior settlements on the Papua Highlands are generally agricultural communities where traditional farming, primarily the cultivation of tuber crops such as sweet potato, plays a dominant role in local livelihoods.
Real estate and investment
Settlement-level real estate market data for Halifur are not available. In the broader context of Kabupaten Yalimo, the real estate market of the region as a whole is extremely limited and underdeveloped, reflecting the area's low population density, access difficulties, and infrastructure gaps. In interior areas of the Papua Highlands, real estate transactions are minimal, and formal market mechanisms barely function – land use is predominantly regulated by traditional customary law systems. As a general regulatory framework in Indonesia, it should be noted that foreign nationals cannot acquire full ownership rights (Hak Milik) over real property; only limited ownership titles, such as Hak Pakai (use rights), are available to them under specified conditions. This regulation applies throughout the country, including in Papua. From an investment perspective, the settlements of Kabupaten Yalimo and Abenaho District within it currently lack the infrastructure or institutional support comparable to larger Papua cities, which complicates formal real estate investment.
Safety and security
Publicly available, verifiable settlement-level statistics on security in Halifur are not available. Interior areas of the Papua Highlands, including Kabupaten Yalimo regency, are generally characterized by traditional tribal communities that resolve internal conflicts according to their own customary law norms, while the presence of state law enforcement can be limited in more remote areas. Tribal-related local tensions occasionally occur in interior Papua regions, which is why travel advisories for the broader Highland Papua province generally recommend caution. However, sources contain no data on specific security incidents or statistics for Halifur. Anyone planning to visit the region should consult current and reliable travel advisory publications for information based on the situation at the time of travel.
Tourist attractions
Independent, concrete sources naming specific tourist attractions for Halifur and Abenaho District are not available. Regarding the natural characteristics of the broader Kabupaten Yalimo region, the Papua Highlands in general is an area of steep mountain ridges, deep valleys, and rainforests, which can be mentioned within the context of facts suitable for describing the region as a whole. In nearby areas that formerly belonged to Kabupaten Jayawijaya – from which Yalimo was separated – the Baliem Valley is a more well-known tourist destination, which provides an impression of the region's cultural and natural heritage, but it lies outside Yalimo's administrative boundaries. Halifur itself, due to its interior mountain location and the scarcity of available source material, is currently considered an undocumented and inaccessible destination for organized tourism.
Summary
Halifur is a small, mountainous Indonesian settlement that belongs to Abenaho District of Kabupaten Yalimo, which became independent in 2008, in Highland Papua province. Sparse development, traditional community lifestyles, and limited infrastructure – all characteristic of the kabupaten as a whole – define the character of the broader region. Since independent, verifiable sources about the settlement are not available, facts at the regency level provide the framework for understanding the place. Halifur can be counted among those small settlements of the interior Papua Highlands about which publicly available knowledge remains limited, and which primarily represent the living space of local communities.

