Awo – small settlement in Kodeoha District, North Kolaka Regency
Awo is a small settlement in Indonesia located in Sulawesi Tenggara (South-East Sulawesi) Province, more specifically within the administrative area of Kabupaten Kolaka Utara (North Kolaka Regency), belonging to Kecamatan Kodeoha District. Based on its coordinates (approximately 3.43 degrees south latitude and 121.00 degrees east longitude), it is situated in the central-eastern part of Sulawesi island, near the northern Kolaka mountain region. Detailed, itemized statistical and encyclopedic sources for the given area are currently unavailable, therefore the following description relies on general context verifiable at regency and provincial level, as well as reliable database fields. Awo belongs to those internal, sparsely urbanized zones of Sulawesi island that are characterized primarily by agricultural and natural attributes.
General overview
Kecamatan Kodeoha is a relatively lesser-known, rural district within Kabupaten Kolaka Utara. Kolaka Utara Regency itself became an independent administrative unit in 2007, previously forming part of Kabupaten Kolaka; its seat is the city of Lasusua. The regency's terrain consists of mountainous and hilly landscape, segmented by dense tropical forests, river valleys, and agricultural areas. Awo, as one of the settlements in Kodeoha District, fits into this characteristically rural, nature-proximate environment. The local livelihood may be based primarily on agriculture – including cocoa, coconut, and rice production – and to a lesser extent on fishing and mining activities, though these assertions regarding Awo cannot be verified by concrete sources. According to Indonesian census data, Kolaka Utara Regency has a total population of several tens of thousands, the vast majority of which lives in smaller villages and scattered settlements; based on district-level breakdown, Kodeoha Kecamatan is also counted among the less populous districts. Urbanization levels are low, and the development of basic infrastructure (roads, electrical networks, health services) may be limited, similar to other, more distant interior areas of the province.
Real estate and investment
No independent, itemized source material is available regarding Awo's real estate market and investment opportunities, therefore general characteristics of the broader regency and province provide some orientation points. The real estate market of Sulawesi Tenggara Province is overall substantially smaller in volume and less liquid than in more densely populated or touristically developed areas of Indonesia (such as Bali or certain districts of Java). In the area of Kabupaten Kolaka Utara, real estate transactions consist primarily of agricultural land and simple residential property sales; due to the underdeveloped commercial real estate market, investment returns and value appreciation are difficult to forecast. An important general note is that in Indonesia, land ownership regulation is restricted for foreign nationals: foreign individuals cannot as a rule acquire full ownership rights (Hak Milik) over properties, but may only use real estate within limited legal titles – such as long-term lease rights (Hak Sewa) or, under certain conditions, Hak Pakai title. This restriction arising from general Indonesian real estate regulations applies throughout the country, including Sulawesi Tenggara Province and within it Kolaka Utara Regency. Due to its rural, interior location and current infrastructure conditions, Awo's area is not currently considered an active investment destination.
Safety and security
No concrete, itemized source is available regarding Awo's public safety situation. Sulawesi Tenggara Province in general ranks among Indonesia's less conflict-laden regions, in contrast to certain other provinces of the archipelago where intercommunal tensions have occurred in past decades. In rural, sparsely populated areas – such as Kodeoha Kecamatan and its settlements – risks affecting public safety are typically different from those in major cities: organized crime is less characteristic, yet risks arising from infrastructure deficiencies, potential difficulties in transportation conditions, and limited accessibility of health services may be more significant. To conduct any concrete public safety assessment for Awo would require reliable local knowledge and current, verifiable sources, which are not presently available.
Tourist attractions
No named, verifiable source is available regarding Awo's tourist attractions. It is characteristic of Kabupaten Kolaka Utara Regency as a whole that its natural attributes – mountainous landscapes, river valleys, tropical forests – represent potential nature tourism appeal, but specific named attractions connected to Awo and their precise accessibility cannot be verified from sources. Lasusua city, known as the regency seat, is one of the region's most important transportation and service hubs, from which natural areas within Kolaka Utara territory are accessible. Broader tourist attractions in Sulawesi Tenggara Province – including the coral reefs of Wakatobi National Park (located in the southern part of the province) – lie far from Awo, thus their access requires separate travel. The interior areas of Sulawesi island generally rank among less explored destinations more relevant for those interested in ecotourism and nature trekking.
Summary
Awo is a small, rural settlement in Indonesia's Sulawesi Tenggara Province, in Kecamatan Kodeoha District of Kabupaten Kolaka Utara Regency. Detailed, itemized public source material about the settlement is not available, therefore the above description necessarily relies on general context verifiable at regency and provincial level. The area is characterized primarily by agricultural and natural attributes, its tourism infrastructure is underdeveloped, and its real estate market is narrow and lacks liquidity. For those requiring more precise and current information concerning Awo or Kodeoha District, Indonesian administrative registries and local government bodies may serve as reliable starting points.

