There are a couple of reasons why your flag might have been declined.
The phrasing of your flag doesn't make it clear what you want to happen. Yes, following the link would make it clear, but you shouldn't use links to convey that. Links should be used only as supporting evidence. As written, your flag could also be interpreted as asking for a duplicate target to be changed, which is definitely something a mod will decline to do.
The mod who handled your flag might have disagreed with the consensus in the linked meta post. As is clear from the comments on the linked meta answer, the mod team hasn't reached an internal consensus on that
The internal discussion didn't exactly reach a conclusion, ... - Cody Gray
Even if you phrase the flag correctly, and the handling mod agrees that fixing such duplicate banners is a reasonable thing to do, the mod might have just made a mistake. These things happen, and you shouldn't let it put you off raising flags in the future. A declined flag is not a big deal at all, despite the admittedly scary warning banner you can be presented with.
If you're sure that your flag is valid, you can raise another flag on the post. This is not something you should make a habit of doing, but it's an option. Be sure to mention your previous flag, and of course, be explicit with what you want to happen. Definitely don't do this a third time though.
In this case, fixing a duplicate banner is also something that regular users can do if they have a gold tag-badge, and so you could drop a message in a chat room where such users hang out. This was a PHP question, and there's a reasonably active chat room where PHP users hang out. (You should check the chat room norms before just dropping a link there, as is the case for any chat room). You could also ask in SOCVR since you're not involved in this post, and there are likely users hanging out there who can fix it.