Kopi – settlement in Kabupaten Mappi Assue district, South Papua province
Kopi is a small settlement in the South Papua (Papua Selatan) province of Indonesia, within the administrative area of Kabupaten Mappi, belonging to the Assue district (Kecamatan Assue). Based on its geographic coordinates (approximately 6° south latitude and 139° east longitude), it is located in the inland areas of Papua, on the southern part of New Guinea island. The region constitutes one of Indonesia's least developed and most sparsely populated macro-regions, Papua, where natural environment and untouched rainforests play a defining role. In the case of Kopi, no independent settlement-level statistical or encyclopedic sources are currently available; the region is therefore presented below in the context of verified data relating to the broader administrative unit, Kabupaten Mappi.
General overview
Kopi belongs to the Assue district, which is one of the kecamatan of Kabupaten Mappi. The seat of Kabupaten Mappi is the city of Kepi, which is located in Obaa district. According to 2024 data, the entire kabupaten has a population of 114,153, and from the scale of the entire regency it can be inferred that individual small named settlements, including Kopi, are typically very small communities. Within the kabupaten, the most populous district is Obaa district, while the least populated is Yakomi kecamatan — this illustrates that significant variations exist between the individual administrative units within the region. The available source does not provide exact population data for Kopi and Assue district, so reliable estimates cannot be given for these. It is generally characteristic of inland Papua areas that settlement infrastructure provision is limited, with river and air transport providing most transportation connections, while the road network is limited. Agriculture, forestry, and activities related to natural resources form the economic foundation of the region.
Real estate and investment
No specific, verifiable real estate market data is available for Kopi and its immediate surroundings. Taking the broader context into account, it can be stated that Kabupaten Mappi and the entire South Papua region are located on the periphery of Indonesia's real estate market: the area's low population density, limited infrastructure, and poor transportation connections have not yet made this region a typical investment destination. In Indonesia, the regulation of real estate ownership operates within a bound system: foreign citizens cannot acquire full ownership rights (Hak Milik) to real estate, but can only maintain interest on limited legal titles — such as Hak Pakai (right of use) or long-term rental constructions. This general Indonesian regulatory framework applies to Papua, and thus to Kabupaten Mappi. In inland Papua areas, real estate developments are primarily linked to state infrastructure investments, and private investment activity is significantly lower than on Indonesia's more developed islands or touristically frequented areas.
Safety and security
No independent data on public safety relating to Kopi appears in available sources. Regarding public safety in inland Papua areas in general, it can be said that in certain parts of the region, historical, political, and social tensions occasionally influence daily life, although this picture is not uniform across the entire region. Kabupaten Mappi is among the less frequently visited areas among South Papua regions, where local communities predominantly live within the framework of traditional lifestyles. In general, Indonesian authorities seek to ensure basic public safety functions in all administrative units of the country, but in extremely remote, small-population, and difficult-to-access areas, institutional presence is necessarily more limited. Specific crime statistics or settlement-level public safety data cannot be reliably cited based on the available source material.
Tourist attractions
No verified tourist attraction specifically named for the Kopi area appears in sources. The broader region, Kabupaten Mappi and the South Papua inland areas, presents an extremely varied natural geographic picture: extensive river systems, floodplains, rainforests, and the traditional culture of local indigenous communities form the character of the region. However, these assets cannot be identified in the available materials in a source-verified manner, linked to the specific attractions of Kopi or Assue district. In inland Papua areas, the potential for ecotourism and cultural tourism is theoretically present, but due to underdeveloped infrastructure and accessibility difficulties, these opportunities are only accessible in organized, specialized travel forms. Travelers visiting the region typically require significant logistical preparation, and the planning of such trips requires professional support.
Summary
Kopi is a small, difficult-to-access inland Papua settlement that forms part of the Assue district of Kabupaten Mappi in South Papua province. Verified data for the entire kabupaten records a population of 114,153 for 2024, but Kopi's own data does not appear in sources. The characteristics of the region — limited infrastructure, low population density, peripheral location — equally determine the real estate market, investment, and tourism picture. The place certainly belongs among those rare, poorly documented inland Papua settlements that appear more in administrative records than in broader public attention.

