Hurualma – small highland settlement in Yalimo Regency, Papua Pegunungan province
Hurualma is a small highland settlement in eastern Indonesia, located in Papua Pegunungan province, also known as Highland Papua. Administratively, it belongs to Abenaho district (kecamatan), which forms part of Kabupaten Yalimo. Based on the settlement's coordinates (-3.7852847, 139.4466005), it is situated in one of the remote, difficult-to-access areas of the Papuan highlands. There is no detailed, standalone documentation available about the village itself from Indonesian or other sources; therefore, the following primarily describes the broader regency-level context, clearly indicating which administrative level each piece of information pertains to.
General overview
Hurualma is one of presumably small-population villages belonging to Abenaho kecamatan within Kabupaten Yalimo. Kabupaten Yalimo was established on January 4, 2008, based on Undang-Undang Nomor 4 Tahun 2008, and is one of six regencies created simultaneously in Papua province at that time. The regency was separated from the previously unified Kabupaten Jayawijaya, with its administrative seat located in Elelim district. The regency takes its name from the local Yali ethnic group and their traditional territory, Yalimu. In mid-2024, Kabupaten Yalimo's total population was 104,913 people, with a population density of merely 33 people per square kilometer, which is an extremely low figure and indicates the area's highland, sparsely habitable character. The Yalimo region as a whole is characterized by the Papuan highlands' subalpine and tropical forest-interspersed steep topography, within which individual villages, including presumably Hurualma, typically exist as small, self-sufficient communities. Infrastructure, roads, and digital connectivity are limited across much of the regency, fundamentally determining the area's development level and accessibility.
Real estate and investment
For Hurualma, neither local nor regional real estate market data are publicly available. Kabupaten Yalimo as a whole — and presumably Abenaho district and Hurualma as well — represents one of the poorly documented, infrastructurally underdeveloped areas of the Indonesian real estate market. Real estate transactions in the region are extremely limited, and property ownership is primarily understood within the framework of traditional community and tribal land use. It is worth noting that under Indonesian regulations generally applicable throughout the country, foreign nationals cannot acquire full ownership rights (Hak Milik) to real estate; for them, primarily Hak Pakai (usage rights) or other limited title rights are available, the details of which depend on the specific area and current regulatory environment. The economy of Kabupaten Yalimo is predominantly based on agriculture, primarily subsistence farming; larger-scale commercial or tourism investment activity does not characterize the regency level based on available data.
Safety and security
Specific, verifiable data on Hurualma's public safety are not available. Certain areas of Papua Pegunungan province and within it Kabupaten Yalimo — similar to many regions of the Papuan highlands — are historically areas where state presence and law enforcement infrastructure may be limited. It is generally true for the interior Papuan highlands that difficult terrain and isolation affect authorities' accessibility. However, unique crime statistics or specific security ratings cannot be determined from available sources regarding Hurualma or Abenaho district. For those planning travel or extended stays, the most current and authoritative information is provided by Indonesian authorities and up-to-date travel advisories issued by one's own country's foreign ministry.
Tourist attractions
Regarding Hurualma, no named tourist attractions appear in available sources, so no specific sites can be identified. The broader Kabupaten Yalimo and Papuan highlands in general may hold interest for visitors receptive to tropical highland landscapes, distinctive Papuan flora and fauna, and the traditional culture and lifestyle of the Yali ethnic group, but these elements do not possess documented, formalized tourism infrastructure at the regency level. Approaching the region as a whole requires extraordinary logistical preparation due to poor road conditions and limited air connections. The area's natural attributes — highland forests, varied altitude zones — are potentially appealing in principle to nature enthusiasts, but we are aware of no source-verifiable institutional offerings in this regard.
Summary
Hurualma is a small highland settlement barely documented in external sources, located in Indonesia's Papua Pegunungan province within the framework of Abenaho district and Kabupaten Yalimo. Kabupaten Yalimo was established in 2008 through separation from Kabupaten Jayawijaya, and had just over 100,000 inhabitants in mid-2024 with extremely low population density. Due to the area's interior Papuan highland character, low infrastructural development, and limited documentation, Hurualma is primarily the living space of the local community rather than a tourism or real estate market destination.

