The collapse killed more than 1,100 people and highlighted the grim conditions in Bangladesh's garment industry, a major supplier to global fashion brands.
Mojtaba Kazazi, executive commissioner of Rana Plaza Claims Administration, said injured workers and families of the dead should have compensation payments in six months. Retailers like Bonmarche, El Corte Ingles, Loblaw and Primark have pledged USD 40 million for the fund.
An independent panel formed under the direction of Bangladesh's High Court has recommended that the disabled and the families of the dead should receive more than USD 19,000.
The panel also recommended nearly USD 9,000 for workers who lost limbs and about USD 1,900 for workers who suffered psychological trauma.
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Nearly a year after the collapse, many victims say the compensation has been too slow and that the list of the dead is still incomplete. Dozens of people protested in the capital, Dhaka, and its outskirts today, demanding information about the missing.
Begum said her daughter worked at a factory in Rana Plaza and has been missing since the collapse, but the authorities have yet to confirm she was among the victims.
"I gave them blood for DNA test, but no news, they can't say anything," Begum said.
Kazazi, a former UN official, said volunteers were working to inform the injured workers and the families of the dead to check in with the administration.
His group set up a booth of a Bangladeshi bank where families can open bank accounts to receive the funds directly from compensation fund.
Bangladesh is the second-largest garment-producing country after China, and it earns more than USD 20 billion a year from such exports, mainly to the United States and Europe.