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    Home/Indonesia/Southeast Sulawesi/Konawe Kepulauan/Wawonii Selatan/Baku-baku

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    Wawonii Selatan, Konawe Kepulauan, Southeast Sulawesi

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    About Baku-baku

    Baku-baku – a small rural settlement in the southern part of the Wawonii island group

    Baku-baku is an Indonesian settlement located in Konawe Kepulauan Regency, which belongs to Southeast Sulawesi Province (Southeast Celebes), specifically within Wawonii Selatan District. Based on its coordinates (approximately 4.18 degrees south latitude and 123.06 degrees east longitude), it is situated on one of the smaller islands in the Celebes Sea island archipelago, presumably on Wawonii Island. Konawe Kepulauan Regency itself is a relatively young administrative unit, recognized as part of Southeast Sulawesi Province. Publicly available settlement-level source material about Baku-baku is currently not available, therefore the following description primarily presents the broader administrative and geographical context.

    General overview

    Baku-baku belongs to Wawonii Selatan (South Wawonii) District, which is one of the districts of Konawe Kepulauan Regency. Konawe Kepulauan Regency – whose name roughly translates to "Konawe Islands" – typically consists of small-population villages accessible to one another by water routes. In the region, the livelihoods of local communities are generally based on fishing, small-scale agriculture, and coconut plantations, which is typical for island districts in Southeast Sulawesi. The island location also means that infrastructure – roads, electricity supply, telecommunications – may have more modest development compared to mainland or more urbanized areas. Based on available data, Baku-baku itself can be considered a small-sized, rural village, for which detailed, verified statistical or demographic data is not publicly accessible. The settlement's name is an Indonesian-local designation, and its precise etymology cannot be determined from available sources.

    Real estate and investment

    Settlement-level, publicly verifiable data on Baku-baku's real estate market is not available. The broader Konawe Kepulauan Regency real estate market exhibits the general dynamics characteristic of Southeast Celebes island districts: demand and transaction volume are low, property prices are relatively moderate compared to the Indonesian average, and the pace of infrastructure development is largely dependent on local communities and state investments. Across all of Indonesia, it can be said that direct land ownership by foreign nationals is strongly restricted under Indonesian law: foreigners generally cannot acquire full ownership rights (Hak Milik) on agricultural land or residential plots. The available legal frameworks – such as the Hak Pakai (use rights) institution or nominated ownership structures – require thorough legal preparation for prospective investors. For such a remote island village, it is particularly important to become thoroughly acquainted with local administrative bodies and necessary permits prior to any real estate transaction.

    Safety and security

    Publicly available public safety statistics pertaining to Baku-baku do not exist. Southeast Sulawesi Province and its island districts are generally not among Indonesia's areas of concern from a security perspective. In rural, small-population communities throughout Indonesia, crime rates are typically lower than in larger cities, however the island location and limited infrastructure may hinder rapid response by law enforcement in case of emergency. For travelers and potential investors, observance of standard precautions, prior familiarization with local conditions, and maintaining contact with local authorities are recommended. Based on available source material, it is not possible to issue a specific security assessment pertaining to Baku-baku.

    Tourist attractions

    No verified, publicly available sources point to named tourist attractions associated with Baku-baku. The Wawonii Island and the broader Konawe Kepulauan region generally possess tropical natural endowments of the Celebes Sea: the waters surrounding the islands are known in the region for their coral reefs and diving opportunities, while the terrestrial landscape exhibits hilly and forested character. These general natural endowments are characteristic of island districts, but it is currently not possible to identify specific named attractions near Baku-baku with verified sources. Should someone plan to visit the region, it is advisable to inquire at the administrative seat of Konawe Kepulauan Regency about local tourism opportunities and the schedules of water transport to the island, since accessibility in island districts is generally limited and requires planned logistics.

    Summary

    Baku-baku is a small, rural settlement in Southeast Sulawesi Province, Indonesia, located in Wawonii Selatan District of Konawe Kepulauan Regency, presumably on Wawonii Island. Detailed, verified, settlement-level data – whether regarding population, real estate market, attractions, or public safety – is not publicly available, therefore the description can only rely on the location and the general context of the broader region. Based on its island and rural character, the place presents the image of a remote, quiet community embedded in the natural environment of the Celebes Sea, for which obtaining further reliable information requires recourse to local sources and personal inquiry.


    More about Wawonii Selatan

    Wawonii Selatan – Southern coastal kecamatan on Wawonii Island, Konawe KepulauanWawonii Selatan is a kecamatan in Konawe Kepulauan Regency, Southeast Sulawesi. According to the…

    Wawonii Selatan – Southern coastal kecamatan on Wawonii Island, Konawe Kepulauan

    Wawonii Selatan is a kecamatan in Konawe Kepulauan Regency, Southeast Sulawesi. According to the Indonesian Wikipedia entry, the kecamatan is one of the units of Kabupaten Konawe Kepulauan in Provinsi Sulawesi Tenggara, on Wawonii Island, divided into a number of desa. It sits at roughly 4.16 degrees south latitude and 123.05 degrees east longitude, on the southern coast of Wawonii facing the Banda Sea. Konawe Kepulauan Regency was carved out of Konawe Regency in 2013 and consists primarily of Wawonii Island and small surrounding islands, with Wawonii Selatan as one of the southern coastal kecamatan in this island regency.

    Tourism and attractions

    Wawonii Selatan is not heavily packaged in tourism circuits, but the wider Wawonii Island offers a quiet, low-key experience for travellers seeking a small-island setting outside the better-known Bunaken and Wakatobi areas. The island has a coastline of beaches, mangroves and reef-fringed coves, and small Tolaki, Bajo and Bugis communities that combine subsistence farming with fishing. Pulau Wawonii is also linked in popular media to several small uninhabited islets and to bird-life on the surrounding karst. Visitors typically combine Wawonii Selatan with the regency capital area at Langara on the western side of the island and with mainland trips back to Kendari, the South-East Sulawesi capital.

    Property market

    Detailed property-market data specific to Wawonii Selatan are not published in widely accessible sources, in line with the rural and small-island character of the kecamatan. Housing stock is dominated by single-storey landed houses, traditional Tolaki and Bajo wooden houses and small concrete houses in the desa centres, with no record of branded housing estates, apartments or strata projects. Land transactions across Konawe Kepulauan combine BPN certification with adat tenure and with attention to mining and plantation concessions on the island, so verification of formal title, adat status and any concession overlap is important before any acquisition. Commercial property is limited and concentrated around the kecamatan centre and small ports.

    Rental and investment outlook

    Formal rental supply in Wawonii Selatan is modest and largely informal, dominated by civil servants, teachers and health workers posted into the kecamatan, fishers and small-scale farmers, and occasional project workers connected to mining or infrastructure. The wider Konawe Kepulauan economy depends on coastal fisheries, smallholder coconut and clove plantations, and contested nickel and other mineral activities on Wawonii that have attracted national-level attention. Investors weighing exposure to the area should consider the small scale of the local economy, the dependence on ferry links to Kendari and the political and environmental sensitivity of resource projects on the island, rather than projecting metropolitan-style yields.

    Practical tips

    Wawonii Selatan is reached by ferry from Kendari to Langara on Wawonii and onward by road, with shorter speedboat options also operating in fair weather. Basic services such as puskesmas primary clinics, primary and secondary schools and small markets are organised at desa and kecamatan level, while larger hospitals, banks and the regency administration are concentrated at Langara on the western side of the island and at Kendari on the mainland. The climate is tropical and humid year-round with a wet and dry season typical of southeast Sulawesi. Foreign investors should note that Indonesian regulations restrict freehold land title to Indonesian citizens, and that adat and concession overlaps make Wawonii a complex investment context.

    More about Konawe Kepulauan

    Konawe Kepulauan – Wawonii Island and Coral Reefs in Southeast SulawesiKonawe Kepulauan Regency is the island group of Southeast Sulawesi province, on the western edge of the Banda…

    Konawe Kepulauan – Wawonii Island and Coral Reefs in Southeast Sulawesi

    Konawe Kepulauan Regency is the island group of Southeast Sulawesi province, on the western edge of the Banda Sea. Its capital is Langara, on Wawonii Island. Established in 2013, the regency mainly consists of Wawonii Island and smaller atolls – one of Sulawesi’s least-visited marine areas.

    Attractions and Activities

    Wawonii Island’s coral reefs are excellent for diving and snorkelling: colourful hard and soft corals, tropical fish, turtles. Pristine white-sand beaches are virtually deserted. The island’s interior is tropical forest-covered highland – the Wawonii figbird (Sulawesi-endemic bird) can be observed here. Boat trips with local fishermen can be arranged in fishing villages.

    Culture and Cuisine

    The population consists of Tolaki, Bugis and seafaring groups. The fishing lifestyle is defining: fish drying and traditional boat building are part of daily life. Cuisine is maritime: fresh grilled fish, ikan kuah asam (sour fish soup), coconut milk vegetables.

    Public Safety

    Konawe Kepulauan is primarily remote and underdeveloped in infrastructure. Pay particular attention to the monsoon season when travelling by sea. Healthcare is very limited; Kendari has the nearest hospital.

    Practical Information

    From Kendari by boat, approximately 4–6 hours to Wawonii Island. The best time to visit is April to October (calm seas). Accommodation: very limited – simple guesthouses in Langara.

    More about Southeast Sulawesi

    Southeast Sulawesi is paradise for diving and marine biodiversity, where Wakatobi National Park – a UNESCO biosphere reserve – holds world-class coral reefs. Kendari is the…

    Southeast Sulawesi is paradise for diving and marine biodiversity, where Wakatobi National Park – a UNESCO biosphere reserve – holds world-class coral reefs. Kendari is the capital, Buton Island has historical significance, and Muna Island's cave paintings are remnants of ancient culture. The province lies on the shores of the Banda Sea and Flores Sea.

    Where is Southeast Sulawesi?

    The province is located in southeastern Sulawesi island. Kendari is the capital, accessible by air from Jakarta and Makassar. The Wakatobi Islands (Wangiwangi, Kaledupa, Tomia, Binongko) can be reached by plane or boat from Kendari. Buton Island is accessible by ferry.

    What to See?

    1. Wakatobi National Park – UNESCO Biosphere

    Wakatobi National Park is one of the world's best diving sites, with 750+ coral species. The park is a UNESCO biosphere reserve. Hoga, Kaledupa, and Tomia islands offer crystal-clear waters and rich marine life. Wall diving and macro photography are excellent.

    2. Kendari – Provincial Capital

    Kendari lies on the shores of Kendari Bay and is the departure point for boats to Wakatobi. Nambo Beach and local markets offer insight into Southeast Sulawesi life. The city's calm atmosphere is appealing.

    3. Buton Island – Historic Fort

    Buton Island was the seat of the historic Buton (Wolio) Sultanate. Fort Wolio (Benteng Keraton Wolio) is one of the world's largest forts and preserves local history.

    4. Muna Island Cave Paintings

    Muna Island's caves hold ancient rock art, evidence of early human presence in the region. Liangkobori and Gua Metanduno caves are the main sites.

    5. Moramo Waterfalls

    Moramo Waterfalls (Air Terjun Moramo) are tiered waterfalls near Kendari. Crystal-clear pools and tropical forest offer a pleasant excursion.

    When to Visit?

    April–October is the dry season, ideal for diving. Underwater visibility is best between May and September. Wakatobi is visitable year-round, but the sea is calmer in the dry season.

    How Long to Stay?

    5–8 days recommended:

    • 3–4 days: Wakatobi diving and snorkeling
    • 1 day: Kendari and Nambo Beach
    • 1–2 days: Buton Island and Fort Wolio
    • 1 day: Muna caves or Moramo waterfalls

    Renting or Investing in Southeast Sulawesi?

    If you're considering renting or investing in property in Southeast Sulawesi, these resources on our site can help you make informed decisions:

    • Indonesian Property FAQ – answers to the most common questions about renting and buying
    • Land Zoning Guide – understanding Indonesian land use regulations
    • Indonesian Real Estate Terminology – key terms explained
    • Property Guide – comprehensive guide to Indonesian real estate
    • Living in Indonesia – essential guide for expats

    Official Resources

    For further information about Southeast Sulawesi, these official sources may be helpful:

    • Indonesia Travel – official tourism portal
    • Southeast Sulawesi Provincial Government – regional government information
    • Bank Indonesia – currency and exchange rate data
    • BMKG – weather and climate information
    • Directorate General of Immigration – visa regulations for foreign visitors

    Summary

    Southeast Sulawesi is a dream for divers and marine nature lovers. Wakatobi's coral reefs and Buton's historical heritage together provide a world-class experience.

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