Faithowes – small village settlement in Aitinyo Raya district, Kabupaten Maybrat
Faithowes is a tiny settlement in Indonesia's Papua Barat Daya (Southwest Papua) province, situated within the Kabupaten Maybrat administrative unit and belonging to Aitinyo Raya district. Based on its coordinates (-1.2970979, 132.3150993), it is located in the interior, mountainous regions of West Papua island. The regency's seat is Kumurkek, which was officially proclaimed in 2019 as the administrative center of the kabupaten. Statistical data at the settlement level is currently unavailable, therefore the description below relies primarily on sources at the Kabupaten Maybrat level, which this article consistently indicates.
General overview
Faithowes belongs to Aitinyo Raya district, one of the administrative units of Kabupaten Maybrat. The kabupaten itself was established in 2009 through the division of Kabupaten Sorong, with an area of 5,461.69 km², and according to the 2020 census data, the entire regency had 42,991 inhabitants. The region's original indigenous population is the Maybrat ethnic group, within which the Aitinyo subgroup inhabits precisely the area to which Faithowes belongs—this is also reflected in the name of Aitinyo Raya district. The Maybrat people are divided into three main branches: the Ayamaru, Aitinyo, and Aifat communities. Since the 2009 administrative separation, the regency's development has been accompanied by political tensions, primarily in the form of disputes surrounding the location of the administrative capital, which were only resolved by 2019. Faithowes itself is a small, little-known settlement; it does not feature in broader public awareness from either tourism or economic perspectives, but the characteristics of the regency as a whole—the Papuan highland natural environment, indigenous culture, and relatively low population density—apply generally to this area as well.
Real estate and investment
Settlement-level real estate market data for Faithowes is not available. In the broader context of Kabupaten Maybrat, it can be stated that the regency became an independent administrative unit in 2009, and its infrastructural development has been ongoing over the past one and a half decades. In such newly created, rural, low-population-density Papuan kabupatens, the real estate market is typically narrow and relatively informal; transactions take place predominantly within the framework of local customary law, land-use traditions, and community agreements. Under Indonesia's general land ownership regulations, foreign natural persons cannot acquire direct ownership rights (Hak Milik) to real estate; for them, primarily Hak Pakai (use rights) and in some cases Hak Sewa (lease rights) frameworks are available, for specified periods and under defined conditions. In the interior, rural settlements of Kabupaten Maybrat—into which Faithowes falls—commercial real estate development and foreign investor activity are, based on available information, negligible.
Safety and security
Public security-specific data for Faithowes settlement is not available. At the Kabupaten Maybrat regency level, it is known that since the establishment of the administration, tensions among local communities have been caused primarily by political and territorial disputes—mainly surrounding the question of the administrative capital, which was resolved by 2019. Generally speaking, in the interior rural areas of West Papua, the public security picture is complex: the density of formal law enforcement infrastructure is lower than in Indonesian cities, yet in such rural communities, traditional social control and community cohesion play a significant role in maintaining everyday security. Specific crime statistics or security assessments pertaining to Faithowes cannot be provided; for travelers to the area, assessment of the current situation based on information from Indonesian authorities and local organizations is recommended.
Tourist attractions
No named tourist attractions for Faithowes are identified from available sources. The natural endowments characteristic of Kabupaten Maybrat as a whole—the mountainous landscape of the Papuan island interior, rainforests, the relatively untouched natural environment, and the indigenous cultures of the Aitinyo, Ayamaru, and Aifat subgroups—could theoretically represent attractions for those interested in ecotourism and cultural tourism. Visits to destinations of this type throughout the regency require organized, pre-planned travel, given infrastructural limitations. Based on current data, it is not possible to name specific, source-verified attractions, temples, natural features, or festivals; information about tourist routes in the kabupaten is provided primarily by local government bodies or tourism offices in Sorong city.
Summary
Faithowes is a small, poorly documented settlement in Indonesia's Papua Barat Daya province, within Kabupaten Maybrat's Aitinyo Raya district. The regency was formed in 2009, with an area exceeding 5,400 km², and according to 2020 data, had nearly 43,000 inhabitants. For Faithowes, which belongs to the traditional territory of the Aitinyo subgroup, detailed demographic, tourism, or real estate market data is not available; characteristics pertaining to the region can be outlined from the general context of Kabupaten Maybrat, which corresponds to a rural, low-population-density Papuan area rich in natural endowments but relatively underdeveloped in terms of infrastructure.

