This happens a lot with the recommend closure flags, and there's not anything you can do about it other than just leave it in your queue, since it is not possible to manually retract a flag.
Recommend closure flags only get dismissed under three conditions:
Another user votes to close the question, either from review or the question itself, for the same reason you selected. Dismisses as helpful.
The question gets closed or deleted at any point. Dismisses as helpful (whether it was closed for the reason you chose or not).
Reviewers choose to leave it open. Dismisses as declined.
Moderators can somewhat indirectly dismiss these flags, depending on the circumstances:
To mark it helpful, they can just close the question. This does however require that they agree it should be closed for some reason, which is harder for duplicates since that also requires some knowledge on the topic to determine it is actually a duplicate.
To decline the flag, they can view the timeline, visit the review item that was created, and then click the Leave Open button.
There is a huge problem with option two, though. Questions with only a single, really old recommend closure flag no longer have a review task for them. That means the second option to decline it is no longer available for us. If the question really shouldn't be closed, it is impossible to correctly dismiss the flag even as a moderator.
So users without the privilege to vote to close will sometimes find these lingering flags deep in their flag history that simply never get touched, because no one ever looks at them. Or more appropriately, they're not ever shown to anyone. They'll only get dismissed on the off-chance someone else stops by that question and votes to close it, or another user flags it and bumps it into the Close Votes queue (which may still take a while since that queue is massive).