 Seven years ago on June 3rd, the Neonamanos movement was formed in Argentina. Neonamanos translates to not one woman less. To commemorate the 7th anniversary, this year on 3rd June, thousands of citizens took to the streets across Argentina, demanding an end to violence against women, an end to feminicides and raising issues important for women's rights. In the capital city Buenos Aires, citizens marched from Plaza de Mayo to the Congress. Similar marches were organized in different cities. In the last two years, Neonamanos commemorations were held virtually due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Physical marches and mobilizations took place after a gap of two years this time. The Neonamanos movement began in 2015 in the wake of the brutal femicide of 14-year-old Shia Rapaz by her 16-year-old boyfriend Manuel Mancia. A group of feminist journalists, artists and academics came together and founded the organization to denounce patriarchal violence, demanding an end to all forms of violence against women and call for equal social-political rights for them. The movement expanded quickly and also became a collective for gender-diverse people and their social struggles. It has spread across several Latin American countries such as Bolivia, Chile, El Salvador, Guatemala, Paraguay, Peru and Uruguay. Since 2015, every year the movement organizes massive marches across the country to demand an end to violence against women and non-binary people and demand justice for numerous of its victims. Some of the slogans being raised by women include, not one less, we want to live, have freedom and be debt-free, enough of femicides, transvesticides and transfemicides, feminist judicial reform now, among others. While abortion has been legalized in Argentina after a long and sustained struggle, the women reiterated their demands for effective implementation of the voluntary termination of pregnancy law. They also raised demands for fair and equal pay for women workers, especially considering the sharp inflation Argentina is currently witnessing. Women also highlighted the persisting, alarming number of femicides and transfemicides committed in the country in the past years. According to the recent report by The Now That They See Us Observatory, between June 3, 2015 and May 29, 2021, over 1,700 femicides were registered in Argentina. In other words, a woman was killed every 31 hours in these six years. The data shows that gender violence has not ceased to exist in Argentina in the years since the movement started. Women and non-binary people continue to be the victims of patriarchal violence. However, they are determined to fight it and claim their rights with collective actions.