Your flag points out a flaw in the current flag handling system.
One of the best things that's happened recently to the moderator flag queue was the moving of close vote flags to the close vote queue. Close vote flags were always the hardest for us to handle, since they often required domain-specific expertise to determine if a question should indeed be closed.
The worst of those by far were duplicate votes, since unless something was a word-for-word duplicate they often required you to know the subject matter at hand to be able to properly close them. People often got these completely wrong, and when we went along with it good questions were closed improperly as duplicates. That made a lot of people rather angry, so we became hesitant to act on them. Now that those are in the review queue, community members can vote on them and they can get exposed to people with the right expertise. As a result, we're now declining most of the "other" flags that ask us to close things as duplicates in order to direct them to standard duplicate close votes or close flags.
However, this presents a problem when it comes to people who flag that something was improperly closed as a duplicate of another post. That has the same problems as the duplicate close flags we saw before, only now people are asking us to override the votes of five community members as well. In your case, you're also asking us to re-close it as a duplicate of the third question, which requires us to read and analyze three questions to determine if you're making the right call here. Again, if we get this wrong, we risk not just directing people in the wrong way, but also angering the five close voters.
I'm not quite sure how to handle flags like this if none of us is sure of the assertion that something is not closed correctly as a duplicate. Even if these were kicked into the reopen queue, many of the "not a duplicate" flags we get convey additional information that tries to make a case for why it's not a duplicate. That information would not be presented to reviewers.
The best I can think of is to present your case for why something isn't a duplicate on Meta or in an appropriate chat room. As I said, we're a little leery of handling these if we don't understand the material well enough to see why five voters were wrong in choosing a particular duplicate.