Jordan's southern town of Karak was the beginning last Friday of militant demonstrations denouncing the doubling of the price of bread. The revolt of the people spread from Karak throughout the south of Jordan as far as Hay al-Tafailah, a poor neighborhood of the capital Amman. Karak residents said the protests stemmed from growing economic hardship. Bread is a staple food for the poor who form a majority of Jordan's 4.2 million people. The price of bread rose from around 12 cents to 26 cents after the government sharply reduced wheat subsidies. The hike in the price of bread is part of a forced agreement with the International Monetary Fund to reduce Jordan's deficit. The last upheaval against the Jordanian government was in 1989 against an IMF sponsored rise in the price of fuel. The response from King Hussein was to vow "to hit with an iron fist any hand of any demented person and anyone who challenges security and instigates dissent." He sent army units to Karak and other regions arresting over three hundred residents, began a curfew and sealed off the area. King Hussein was supported by Israeli Foreign Minister David Levy who said, "I hope that King Hussein will not only stand guard but will be the guard of order despite others exploiting a certain economic or social situation." A local official in Karak said the army has "broken into many homes in the night and the roundups are continuing." Karak's Mayor Ahmed al-Mahadin told reporters: "If the government continues its iron fist policies there will be an explosion 1,000 times more powerful than the one which already took place." The response of the Jordanian government and the Israeli support are in the style of those who turn political and economic issues into questions of law and order such as in the U.S. The government imposed a new law effectively doubling the price of bread. The people responded by denouncing this economic act inspired by the imperialist IMF. The government gives itself the right to pass a law damaging the interests of the people, but the people have no right to disagree with the law except within very controlled bounds dictated by the government. If the people go beyond what is allowed by the very government that passed the harmful law in the first place, the "iron fist" comes crashing down on their heads. Reactionary societies such as these are incapable of finding any solutions to the problems they face; they must be completely renovated and modernized in order to meet the demands of the people and open the door to progress. Shawgi Tell University at Buffalo Graduate School of Education [EMAIL PROTECTED]