Malapa – a small village on North Halmahera island, in Kecamatan Malifut
Malapa is an Indonesian village (desa) that belongs to the administrative district of Kecamatan Malifut, forming part of Kabupaten Halmahera Utara (North Halmahera regency) in Maluku Utara (North Maluku) province. Geographically, it is classified within the Moluccas (Maluku) macroregion, whose island archipelago is located in East Indonesia. Based on the village's coordinates (1.1551814° N, 127.8329889° E), it is situated near the coastal and highland landscapes of North Halmahera. Based on available sources, detailed numerical description of the settlement beyond its administrative classification is not available.
General overview
Malapa is a small, poorly documented village with an extremely low level of recognition among both domestic and foreign audiences. The Indonesian Wikipedia records only that it is located in Kecamatan Malifut, in Kabupaten Halmahera Utara, in Maluku Utara province. Kecamatan Malifut itself is a relatively sparsely inhabited district on the island of North Halmahera, characterized partly by agriculture and partly by coastal features. According to regency-level data, the area of Halmahera Utara is characterized by diverse natural environments: volcanic highlands, tropical forests, and coastlines alternate with one another. Since Malapa belongs to Kecamatan Malifut, its location most likely fits into a region with the aforementioned natural characteristics, yet concrete village-level confirmation of these features is not possible from available sources. The rural desa classification typically denotes a smaller-population community living from agriculture or fishing, but in the case of Malapa, precise population figures, economic structure, and infrastructure cannot be documented from available materials.
Real estate and investment
No village-level, verifiable data is available regarding Malapa's real estate market. The broader real estate market of Kabupaten Halmahera Utara follows patterns typical of Indonesia's eastern, peripheral regions: unlike more developed West Indonesian centers (Java, Bali), property prices and development activity are generally at lower levels, though local demand effects may emerge in certain sectors—such as near mineral resources, fishing, and plantation agriculture. Maluku Utara province has received economic attention in recent decades due to certain mining projects (including developments related to nickel ore and other mineral raw materials), but source-based claims cannot be made regarding the specific real estate market impact of this on Kecamatan Malifut or directly on Malapa. Regarding the general framework of Indonesian land ownership regulations, it is important to note that foreign nationals cannot acquire direct land ownership (Hak Milik) in Indonesia; for them, presence through Hak Pakai (use rights) or corporate structures represents the available legal solutions, to which general Indonesian regulations likewise apply.
Safety and security
No village-level criminal or security statistics regarding Malapa appear in available sources. The broader Maluku Utara province has, according to general assessments by Indonesian authorities, gradually stabilized in the past decade following the conclusion of the period of religious and ethnic conflicts in the early 2000s. The North Maluku region is not currently classified among particularly high-risk areas of the country, though in rural, remote villages infrastructural deficiencies (limited healthcare provision, difficult accessibility) themselves count as relevant factors. These general regional characteristics provide direct background context for Malapa's situation as well, though village-level security conclusions should be withheld due to the absence of specific data.
Tourist attractions
Available sources mention no named tourist attractions, natural or cultural sites in relation to Malapa, thus village-level sights cannot be documented. At the regency level of Kabupaten Halmahera Utara, however, it is known that the island of North Halmahera is a region renowned for its natural values, including tropical coral reefs, diverse marine life, and highland landscapes. The city of Tobelo, located in the region, is the administrative and commercial center of the regency, from which surrounding areas are more easily accessible. Kecamatan Malifut itself encompasses both coastal and inland areas, so the natural attributes of the immediate environment could in principle be attractive to nature hikers and divers, though no verifiable tourist source linking these specifically to Malapa is available. The Moluccas generally appear in specialized literature as a potential destination for Indonesian ecotourism and dive tourism, yet no quantitative or site-specific data can be cited regarding its manifestation in Malapa.
Summary
Malapa is a small Indonesian village (desa) in Kecamatan Malifut, in Kabupaten Halmahera Utara, in Maluku Utara province, within the Moluccas macroregion. Only its administrative classification is recorded in available sources regarding the settlement; population figures, economic data, infrastructural characteristics, and named attractions are not documented. The broader region, North Halmahera and Maluku Utara province, exhibits diverse natural environments and a gradually stabilizing economic and security situation, yet these alone are insufficient for drawing direct conclusions regarding Malapa.

