NECOCLI, Colombia—In the Colombian beach town of Necocli, thousands of Haitian migrants live in a makeshift tent city while waiting to cross the Gulf of Uraba into Panama through the Darien Gap. While Necocli always has been a stopover point on the caravan route to the United States, the number of migrants has increased dramatically since President Joe Biden took office in January. Local estimates suggest as many as 20,000 migrants inhabit the camp. The passage beyond Panama is a small step in a long journey that, for the majority, begins in Brazil or Chile, with the ultimate objective of crossing the border into the United States. Ysmay Cherimont, 27, a Haitian migrant who has lived in the tent camp for a month, spoke to The Epoch Times about his plans: “I lived in Valparaiso [Chile] four years before coming to Colombia. It’s not good to live there. Too hard and …