Adaut – small settlement in Selaru district of the Tanimbar Islands
Adaut is an Indonesian settlement located in Maluku Province, within Selaru district (Kecamatan Selaru). Administratively, it forms part of Kabupaten Kepulauan Tanimbar (formerly Kabupaten Maluku Tenggara Barat), whose capital is Saumlaki. The Tanimbar Islands archipelago is one of Indonesia's most remote outer island territories, situated to the south on seas bordering Australia. Based on the settlement's coordinates (−8.13° S; 131.11° E), it is located near Selaru Island in the eastern part of the Moluccas.
General overview
Adaut is a small, little-known rural settlement for which no independent, publicly accessible statistical or encyclopedic source currently exists. Kecamatan Selaru is among the Tanimbar Island administrative units belonging to the relatively isolated inner regions of the Indonesian archipelago. In the broader region, within Kabupaten Kepulauan Tanimbar – which was renamed in 2019 from its former name Kabupaten Maluku Tenggara Barat under Government Regulation No. 2 of 2019 – communities are primarily small fishing and agricultural settlements. The kabupaten was established in 1999 through the division of Kabupaten Maluku Tenggara, and then in 2008 Kabupaten Maluku Barat Daya was created from part of its territory. Due to the remoteness of the Tanimbar Islands, villages in this area typically have limited infrastructure and accessibility, with access by sea or air.
Real estate and investment
Publicly available real estate market data specific to Adaut does not exist, so the following presents context at the broader kabupaten and provincial level. Kabupaten Kepulauan Tanimbar is considered a peripheral area from the perspective of the Indonesian real estate market: investor interest so far has been primarily connected to the Blok Masela, an offshore hydrocarbon extraction concession area located in the sea territory of the Tanimbar Islands, whose development work is currently underway. Upon completion of the block, significant economic impact is expected by local administration and economic actors. Nevertheless, this potential development concerns primarily the industrial and commercial sectors, and its direct impact on small, isolated villages such as Adaut cannot currently be assessed from public sources. Under the general framework of Indonesian land ownership regulations, foreign individuals cannot acquire full ownership rights (Hak Milik) over Indonesian land; for them, primarily long-term rental forms (such as Hak Sewa or Hak Pakai) are available, whose applicability in the given area depends also on local regulations.
Safety and security
No independent, publicly verifiable data exists on safety and security in Adaut. Maluku Province in general has consolidated over the past two decades following the conclusion of religious-ethnic conflicts that occurred between 1999 and 2002. In the outer, island territories of the province – which include the Tanimbar Islands archipelago – isolation and limited infrastructure may present certain difficulties in daily life and official response to potential emergencies; however, this is a general condition characteristic of the region and does not constitute documented security risk. For travelers, attention to current foreign ministry and consular information regarding the broader Maluku Province is recommended.
Tourist attractions
No named tourist attraction related to Adaut appears in sources. However, the broader Kabupaten Kepulauan Tanimbar is known in Indonesian domestic tourism for the natural and cultural assets of the Tanimbar Islands archipelago. The Tanimbar Islands, as one of the Moluccas' most remote island groups, are generally recognized as an area known for its natural pristineness and local traditional culture, visited primarily by adventure travelers and those visiting Indonesia's periphery. Saumlaki, the capital of the kabupaten, is the transportation hub through which the region is accessed. Publicly available data on how easily the broader regency's attractions are accessible from Adaut does not exist.
Summary
Adaut is a small, barely documented rural settlement in Maluku Province, Indonesia, located in Selaru district of Kabupaten Kepulauan Tanimbar. The broader kabupaten lies in one of the country's most remote regions on seas bordering Australia, and appears in economic news primarily due to the Blok Masela hydrocarbon development project. No independent statistical, tourist, or real estate market source exists for the settlement; the above is based on verifiable information at the regency level, which provides only broader context for assessing Adaut.

