Lebak Najah – small Bornean settlement in Silat Hulu district of Kapuas Hulu regency
Lebak Najah is an Indonesian settlement in Kalimantan Barat (West Kalimantan) province, located in the Kapuas Hulu regency (Kabupaten Kapuas Hulu) in the middle of Borneo island. It belongs to Silat Hulu kecamatan, and based on its coordinates (0.2688934° N, 112.0834° E), it is located near the equator in the upper catchment area of the Kapuas River. The regency seat of Kapuas Hulu is the nearest urban centre, Putussibau, where most administrative and economic activities are concentrated. Consequently, Lebak Najah can be understood as part of a strongly rural, small district lying in the interior regions of Indonesian Borneo.
General overview
No independent, settlement-level statistical or encyclopaedic sources are available for Lebak Najah, therefore the following is based on data at Kapuas Hulu regency level. Kapuas Hulu regency is the largest regency in West Kalimantan province by area: its territory covers 31,318.25 square kilometres, approximately 21.3 percent of the province's total area. According to the 2020 census, the regency had 252,609 inhabitants; as of mid-2025, the official estimate was 280,198. This vast area combined with relatively low population means that Kapuas Hulu has exceptionally sparse population density compared to neighbouring regencies, and this is likely to apply to villages in interior areas, such as Lebak Najah belonging to Silat Hulu district. The regency shares a land border with Malaysia, creating a geographically and commercially special position for border areas. The Kapuas River is the region's most significant waterway, and has traditionally played an important transport and economic role in the life of interior villages. Rural lifestyle, agriculture, fishing and forestry are defining features of the region.
Real estate and investment
No direct, settlement-level data sources are available for Lebak Najah's real estate market. In the broader context of Kapuas Hulu regency, the region belongs to peripheral regions of the Indonesian property market: sparse population density, limited infrastructure and distance from urban economic centres (such as Pontianak, the provincial capital) generally result in lower property prices and modest investment activity in similar interior areas. The general framework of Indonesian property regulations, however, applies throughout the country: foreign nationals cannot directly acquire land ownership (Hak Milik) in Indonesia; long-term lease constructions (Hak Sewa, Hak Pakai) are available to them, which should be discussed with local legal experts. Investment opportunities at Kapuas Hulu and Silat Hulu kecamatan level are determined primarily by natural resources (forests, river-based management) and agricultural use, rather than property development or tourism-oriented investment.
Safety and security
No independent, verified sources are available regarding Lebak Najah's public safety situation. Kapuas Hulu regency is generally a rural, sparsely inhabited area where government presence in more distant villages is necessarily more limited compared to the regency seat of Putussibau. In Indonesia's interior Bornean regions, the challenges to public safety are characterised less by exceptional crime and more by scattered, difficult-to-access territorial structure, infrastructure deficiencies and natural conditions (river flooding, tropical climate) in everyday life. Source material on extreme, individually documented security events for the regency or Silat Hulu district was not available, therefore no claims can be made regarding this. As in all remote, rural Indonesian areas, prior information gathering and knowledge of local conditions require cautious conduct.
Tourist attractions
No tourist attractions identifiable by name and linked to Lebak Najah could be determined from available sources. The broader Kapuas Hulu regency, however, is known for its natural assets: Danau Sentarum National Park is located within the regency's territory, known for its seasonal lake system, which is a rarity in Indonesia, and its rich biodiversity, and is listed on the UNESCO Biosphere Reserves list. Additionally, Betung Kerihun National Park is also located within the regency's territory; the latter forms part of a cross-border protected area system in the heart of Borneo. Both sites are primarily significant from ecological and nature-tourism perspectives. The specific relationship of Lebak Najah and Silat Hulu kecamatan to these parks and the distances between them could not be precisely determined from the present sources, therefore these attractions are mentioned only as natural values documented at regency level.
Summary
Lebak Najah is a sparsely documented, rural-character small settlement in Borneo, located in Silat Hulu kecamatan of Kapuas Hulu regency in West Kalimantan province. Available data are accessible at the broader regency level: this is West Kalimantan's largest regency by area, yet relatively sparsely inhabited, whose life is shaped by the Kapuas River, natural resources and the shared border with Malaysia. No independent statistical, tourist or real estate market sources specific to Lebak Najah are currently publicly available, therefore detailed presentation of the settlement is possible only through the context of the broader region.

