On a night thick with the echoes of drums and distorted guitars, Quilmes Rock became the stage for a raw and direct denunciation. Malvinas veterans, those ghosts of a war that still bleeds in the collective memory, raised their voices against President Javier Milei.

The National Confederation of Malvinas Combatants, led by Ramón Robles, has filed a criminal complaint that resonates like a war cry: "violation of the duties of a public official, abuse of authority, and treason against the Homeland." Milei's words, spoken at the cenotaph in Plaza de San Martín, where the names of the fallen are etched in stone, are the trigger for this accusation.

"We long for the Malvinas Islanders to one day choose to vote for us with their feet," the president said, a phrase that veterans interpret as an affront to Argentine sovereignty.

On Saturday night, after Dillom's show, the veterans took the stage at Quilmes Rock. Before a crowd of young people, they chanted "and you can see it, and you can see it, whoever doesn't jump is an Englishman," a reminder that the war is not over, that the struggle for the Malvinas remains alive in people's hearts.

"It's a pleasure and a pride to be here," said one of the veterans, his voice resonating in the night air. "We ask you all to remember those who gave their most precious possession, their lives, to defend our Homeland."

In a country where memory is a battleground, the Malvinas veterans have drawn a line in the sand. The complaint against Milei is a reminder that the fight for Argentine sovereignty is not a matter of rhetoric, but of blood and soil. And on the stage of Quilmes Rock, where music and memory intertwine, the message is clear: the Malvinas are not negotiable.