NEW DELHI — Indian police arrested a third man in connection with the gang-rape of a journalist in Mumbai, an official said on Saturday, in a case that has drawn comparisons with an attack in December that led to nationwide protests and a revision of rape laws. News of Thursday's attack sparked street protests and uproar in parliament and put the spotlight back on women's safety in India, where memories of the rape and murder of a student in New Delhi last December are still fresh. Many Indians have questioned whether, despite a toughening of rape laws after last year's attack, India is any safer. The latest assault was in the financial capital Mumbai, which is generally considered India's safest city for women. The 22-year-old victim was admitted to hospital where she is in a stable condition. Police have released sketches of the suspects and say they will ask the government to have the case conducted in a fast-track court. One man was arrested on Friday in connection with the attack, and Mumbai Police Commissioner Satyapal Singh told reporters a second suspect had been arrested. “He has admitted that he has done wrong,” Singh said, adding that the other suspects may have fled to the city's suburbs. Police arrested a third suspect later on Saturday, Singh told Reuters, but did not elaborate. The attack took place shortly before sunset in a former industrial district that is now one of the city's fastest-growing neighborhoods.
“In the 21st-century, I am ashamed that a journalist doing her job has to go through something like this,” said Bharatkumar Raut, a Mumbai-born lawmaker in the upper house of parliament. “We used to say that Mumbai is the safest city in India. But the life of our citizens – not just women – is becoming insecure,” he told Reuters by phone. — Reuters