You have now a 20 year agreement to repay a $12 billion debt that will cost more than double this by the time you repay it, except you won’t repay it, because the terms of the agreement make repayment impossible.
The economic sovereignty of Egypt has been rented by the IMF in a 20 year contract. Presidents may come and go; policy will remain. Can you pressure companies to force the IMF to alter the terms? Maybe; I don’t really know.
But you need to have a party of some kind that articulates and advocates policy alternatives to Austerity. And that party needs to develop a grassroots base of support among workers and consumers.
Given the fact that you are under a repressive dictatorship, one of the priorities should be to limit the ability of the regime to punish you. That means getting some level of control within the prisons. It means establishing a good connection between prisoners and the people outside; it means making life outside a living hell for anyone and everyone who works in the prisons; and it means the prisoners themselves making the 8 or 10 or 12 hour shifts of prison staff unbearable, and as much as possible, unsafe.