"No
electricity, no fuel, workers are on strike, billions are owed to state
and federal workers, $60 billion owed in national debt and the economy
is virtually grounded," APC spokesman Lai Mohammed said.
But across Nigeria, confidence is still high that Buhari, who headed a military government in the 1980s, will fix the mess.
"It's
not in dispute that the Jonathan government has messed up things," said
rice trader Mulikat Bello in the Agege area of Lagos, Nigeria's
financial capital.
- To-do list -
Thirty years ago, Buhari's 15-month military regime was characterised by a hardline crackdown against so-called "indiscipline" and corrupt practices, which sometimes crossed the line into abuse of power.
But he has said things
will be different this time round, with decades of military rule
abandoned since 1999 in favour of multi-party democracy, parliament and
the constitution.
But across the country many hope he can follow through on his election pledge of sweeping change to stop the rot in Africa's most populous nation.
On a bus from Oshodi to Agbado in the Lagos suburbs, unemployed 27-year-old university accountancy graduate Solomon Abegunde said he expects the new administration to create jobs.
In Kano, northern Nigeria's biggest city, private security guard Awwalu Maidawa, 41, wants an end to the Boko Haram insurgency which has claimed at least 15,000 lives since 2009.
Housewife Hajara Sani hopes for investment in education, with 10.5 million children out of school -- the most in the world -- and literacy levels low, particularly in the Muslim north.
Musa Mohammed, a 33-year-old auto mechanic, wants improved power supply, now at an all-time low of just 1,327 megawatts -- below levels during Buhari's last time in office.
Lagos beer distributor Abolaji Odumesi hopes to see Buhari tackle corruption in the oil sector, which accounts for 90 percent of foreign earnings but is dwindling due to falling global crude prices.
Elsewhere
there are calls to diversify the economy, increase taxation to boost
government coffers and tackle poverty that the APC says blights the
lives of some 110 million of Nigeria's more than 170 million people.
Almost everyone talks of corruption, which the austere Buhari believes has made the country a global
laughing stock.
"I
want him to maintain zero tolerance on corruption especially in the
public service and ensure that whoever is found wanting faces the full
wrath of the law," said Maidawa.
- High hopes -
"One
of the first things he (Buhari) has to do is assemble a competent
strategic communications team to manage expectations," said Chris Ngwodo a political
commentator.
"He has to be able to temper the level of expectation but without being a damp squib. It has to be skilfully managed."
To
be sure, Nigeria's military has the upper hand against Boko Haram but
there is still work to do to maintain the peace. On most other fronts,
however, the incoming government has an uphill task.
In
the longer term, he needs to tackle "the absurdity of an oil-producing
nation that imports fuel", build domestic refineries and eliminate fuel
subsidies that are open to corruption, he added.
"It's a pity that Buhari has come at the wrong time," said Debo Adeniran, of the Coalition Against Corrupt Leaders lobby group.
"The Jonathan government has mismanaged the economy with a lot of baggage too heavy for Buhari to carry.
"I still cannot fathom how the incoming administration is going to get the funds to implement its programmes."
On the bus to Agbado, Abegunde is still confident.
"To whom much is given, much is expected," he said.
"Buhari
has no excuse to fail because we gave him our votes with the hope that
he would turn things around... We cannot continue like this. Things have
to change."

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