Alaaha – village in Ueesi district, Kabupaten Kolaka Timur
Alaaha is an Indonesian village (desa) located on the southeastern part of Sulawesi island, in Southeast Sulawesi province. Administratively, it belongs to Kabupaten Kolaka Timur regency, and within that to Ueesi district (kecamatan). Based on its coordinates, the settlement is situated in the more mountainous interior regions of the regency, approximately near –3.64 latitude and 121.29 longitude. Kolaka Timur is a relatively young kabupaten, having been separated from the original Kabupaten Kolaka in 2013, so administrative and infrastructural development in the area has intensified over the past decade.
General overview
According to Indonesian Wikipedia, Alaaha is a desa, that is, a village-level administrative unit belonging to Ueesi kecamatan within Kabupaten Kolaka Timur. More detailed settlement-level data available from sources—such as population figures, area, or local institutional networks—cannot be verified, therefore specific claims cannot be made about them. Ueesi district is located in the interior, topographically more varied part of Kabupaten Kolaka Timur, where livelihoods have traditionally been based on agriculture and forestry. What characterizes Kolaka Timur regency as a whole is that natural resources—including nickel deposits and forested areas—play a determining role in the local economy. As part of Southeast Sulawesi province, the region belongs to the less tourism-oriented but naturally resource-rich interior areas of the Indonesian archipelago. Alaaha itself does not appear in known tourism or commercial guidebooks, which suggests it is a quiet community primarily of agricultural character.
Real estate and investment
For Alaaha, no published settlement-level real estate market data is available, therefore the following reflects the broader regency and provincial context. Kabupaten Kolaka Timur is counted among Indonesia's economically developing regions, where mining and plantation agriculture investments have attracted growing interest over the past decade. In such internally located villages, real estate prices are typically low compared to the Indonesian average, though infrastructure—roads, utilities, internet coverage—may also be more limited. Under general Indonesian legal frameworks, foreigners cannot acquire direct land ownership (Hak Milik); long-term rental arrangements (Hak Sewa) or Hak Pakai titles are available to them under specified conditions. Before making investment decisions, it is advisable to involve a local lawyer and notary, since in regencies like Kolaka Timur, which recently gained independence, land boundary records and property documentation may still be under development.
Safety and security
No publicly available, verifiable statistics or police reports on public safety for Alaaha are available. The broader Southeast Sulawesi province is generally considered a region with medium security indicators compared to the Indonesian average; in rural, interior areas, crime rates are typically lower than in major urban centers. In resource-extraction regions like Kabupaten Kolaka Timur, labor or territorial conflicts around mining are rare, and typically do not directly affect small villages. For travelers, standard precautions—discreet handling of valuables, respect for local customs—are generally applicable advice for rural areas in Indonesia. For up-to-date security information, the relevant consulate or the province's police website is an authoritative source.
Tourist attractions
Verified sources do not identify any tourist attraction, temple, natural site, or event in Alaaha or its immediate vicinity. The broader Kabupaten Kolaka Timur and Southeast Sulawesi province do possess natural attractions—coral reefs known in other parts of the province, rainforested landscapes, and the hillsides characteristic of Sulawesi's interior—but the precise distance and access routes between these and Alaaha cannot be specified due to lack of sources. Based on the internal, topographically varied nature of Ueesi kecamatan, the immediate natural environment—forests, river valleys—may offer informal hiking opportunities, but no source-verified information about organized tourist infrastructure is available. For these reasons, those planning to visit are advised to consult regency-level tourist information offices or local municipal websites to learn about current offerings.
Summary
Alaaha is an Indonesian village-level administrative unit in Southeast Sulawesi province, within Ueesi district of Kabupaten Kolaka Timur. A poorly documented community located in the interior southeastern regions of Sulawesi island, detailed demographic, real estate market, or tourism data are currently not publicly available. Based on the broader regency and provincial context, it is a quiet rural village relying on agriculture and natural resources, and for gaining knowledge about it, primary reliance should be placed on local and provincial administrative sources.

