Pubdate: Tue, 10 Jul 2007 Source: Flint Journal (MI) Copyright: 2007 Flint Journal Contact: http://www.mlive.com/news/fljournal/index.ssf Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/836 Note: Prefers to print letters from people in the area of The Flint Journal Author: Joe Lawlor Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/pot.htm (Marijuana) PASSPORT PROBLEMS HOLD UP MAN'S DEPORTATION FLINT TWP. - Robert Berishaj is still in limbo, not allowed to work in the United States but not yet allowed to leave. "It's kind of like it's not sunny, but it's not raining," said Berishaj, 27, who has lived in the United States since he was 9 but faces deportation to his native Montenegro due to legal entanglements. Monday was supposed to be a day of reckoning for Berishaj, who went to U.S. immigration offices in Detroit, where he was scheduled to receive a passport that would allow him to be deported. Instead, he got a one-month reprieve, allowing him to temporarily stay in the U.S. Joe Berishaj, Robert's brother, said because Montenegro doesn't yet recognize Berishaj as a citizen, the passport paperwork is held up for unknown reasons. Robert was born in the former Yugoslavia but moved with his parents to the United States as a child. He doesn't speak or write Serbian, the official language of Montenegro, and he has no known relatives or friends there. But he has been denied residency here. Days before an immigration judge was to hear his case in 2003, Robert was arrested on a misdemeanor marijuana case. An immigration judge wrote in his opinion that the arrest was a factor in a decision to deny Robert residency. Meanwhile, his entire family, including his parents and brothers, are legal U.S. residents. His brothers married U.S. citizens, allowing them to stay here. His parents were granted permanent residency because their sons married citizens. Berishaj had been working 14-hour days as a manager at the Courtyard Family Restaurant, 5015 S. Saginaw Road, Grand Blanc Township. The restaurant closed after Berishaj had to surrender his working papers and Social Security number to the federal government in April. Robert said to keep busy he's helping out his brother, Joe, who owns Captain Coty's Restaurant in Flint Township. When he does receive a passport, Robert expects to petition Canada to become a resident there. If Canada accepts him, he would perhaps live in the Windsor area so he could still be close to his family. Robert said he was disappointed to see immigration reform die in Congress. "I think maybe that could have helped me," Robert Berishaj said. "Who knows?" - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake