Hong Kong — Demonstrators gathered here Monday outside the office of the city’s leader, demanding that she resign due to the crisis over an unpopular extradition bill that has tested the durability of China’s promises to respect the former British colony’s quasi-autonomy.

The mostly young protesters blocked a street near the city’s waterfront as they stood outside the office of Chief Executive Carrie Lam chanting calls for her to give up the proposed legislation. Nearly 2 million Hong Kong residents, young and old, joined a march on Sunday that lasted late into the night to express their frustrations with Lam and the extradition bill, backed by Beijing. Many stayed on afterward. Hong Kong makes history as black sea of protesters denounce city’s leader and BeijingProtesters blocked some downtown roads well into Monday morning, but gradually yielded to police requests to reopen roads, moving to areas near the city’s government headquarters.
Later on Monday, the protest revived after Joshua Wong, a prominent activist leader, rallied the crowd after his release from prison. The activists have rejected apologies from Lam for her handling of the legislation, which would allow suspects to be sent to mainland China for trial. She announced that work on the bill would be suspended after large protests last week, but the legislation has touched a nerve not easily soothed in a city anxious over the increasingly authoritarian Communist rule of Chinese President Xi Jinping. “If Carrie Lam does not respond to the demands by the protesters, people will come back and the struggle will continue,” Lee Cheuk-yan, an activist and former legislator, said Monday. The uproar over the extradition bill highlights worries that the former British colony is losing the special autonomous status China promised it when it took control in 1997. On June 9, as many as 1 million people demonstrated to express their concern over Hong Kong’s relations with mainland China. The scenes are similar to those in 2014, when protesters camped for weeks in the streets to protest rules that prevented the direct election of the city’s chief executive. Wong, who was imprisoned for his role in the 2014 demonstrations and sit-ins, dubbed the “Umbrella Movement,” was released from prison on Monday after serving half of a two-month sentence on a contempt charge. He soon swapped his white shirt for one that was black – the color of this year’s protests — and joined the fray.