COLOMBIA PORT TOWN — Mayor Eric Adams was heckled Saturday as he made his way through the Colombia port town that tens of thousands of migrants use each year to reach the Darién Gap, the treacherous jungle path smugglers use to bring them from South to North America.
“Shame on you Eric Adams!” a man yelled in English at Hizzoner as he was asking questions about the journey through Necoclí, according to a video from local media.
“It will increase the amount of violence against migrants across the United States!” the man screamed, apparently in response to Adams’ recent comments telling asylum seekers not to come to the Big Apple.
A number of others gathered to protest the Big Apple mayor at the port town with another man holding a sign that read “Go back to New Jersey you migrant hating creep.”
Speaking to local media, Adams said he was given a “true analysis” of the Darién Gap by Colombian officials and law enforcement on Saturday as part of his fact-finding mission in the country, which included a helicopter flyover of the dangerous terrain.
“It was crucial for us in my delegation to come here and engage on the ground,” Adams said at Necoclí.
Mayor Eric Adams was heckled Saturday as he made his way through the Colombia port town that tens of thousands of migrants use each year to reach the Darién Gap. AP“This is a true learning experience of how Colombia has really shown a direction that we can all benefit from by analyzing what they are doing and how we can grow on what they are doing to show the humanity they deserve.”
The mayor also renewed his call for a coordinated response from all the countries affected by the migrant crisis.
Before traveling to Necoclí, which sits on the east coast of the Gulf of Urabá, Adams was taken to undisclosed parts of the Darién Gap, on the other side of the gulf that connects Colombia to Panama.
Reporters tailing the mayor could not make the journey due to security concerns.
Colombian police prohibited Adams from entering the gap, only allowing him to see entrances, as well as speaking to any migrants, the mayor told reporters late Saturday.
The national forces did give the mayor an aerial look at the jungle all the way up to the Panama border.
“It gave us a good visual,” Adams said.
The mayor described a depressing scene of hundreds of migrants on the beaches of Necoclí waiting for boats to take them across the bay sleeping in tents.
“No place of any real hygiene,” he said, adding, “It was just an unkept environment.”
“Shame on you Eric Adams!” a man yelled in English at Hizzoner as he was asking questions about the journey through Necoclí, according to a video from local media. AP“What I don’t want is what played out on the beaches of Colombia to play out on the streets of New York.”
Colombia was Hizzoner’s final segment of his four-day swing through Central and South America Saturday — as part of a trip he touted as an opportunity to speak directly to migrants and give them “a real story of what is happening in New York City.”
The mayor is expected to brief the press later on Saturday about his journey.
Hizzoner was on the final segment of his four-day swing through Central and South America Saturday — as part of a trip he touted as an opportunity to speak directly to migrants and give them “a real story of what is happening in New York City.”
“We are going to tell them that coming to New York doesn’t mean you want to stay in a five-star hotel,” Adams said before the trip. “It doesn’t mean that when you come here, you automatically are going to be allowed to work.”
But the majority of the mayor’s tour has been spent making connections with local leaders and politicians while calling for a global response to the migrant crisis.
When Adams met with more than three dozen migrants in a shelter just outside of Quito, Ecuador, on Friday The Post revealed he failed to make his case to the families who had fled Venezuela.
The mayor has repeatedly said migrants were being fed misinformation about the bounty of the Big Apple, causing thousands to come to the city.
The Post spoke with more than a dozen migrants as well as shelter workers during the trip, but all said they heard nothing about what life in New York City would be like before deciding to make the journey.







