Exactly one of the following two statements is true:
- The duplicate question has answers that answer the OP's question.
- The duplicate question does not have answers that answer the OP's question.
If #1 is true, the question is a duplicate. Vote to close and don't answer it. If you would like to add additional information to the original question, you're welcome to improve that resource by editing the existing answers or adding your own answer.
If #2 is true then the question isn't a suitable duplicate, and you shouldn't be voting to close the question. You're welcome to add an answer if you have one.
If the questions are fundamentally asking the same thing, and the reason that the existing question doesn't answer the current question is that is has no answers, or the existing answers are incorrect/low quality, then you're welcome to answer either question and close the other as a duplicate of the question that now has a quality correct answer. If you can't answer either, feel free to comment with a link to the related question, even though they can't be closed.
If there are subtle differences in the questions that change the correct answer, then they're not duplicates. Consider editing the questions to make the differences more apparent to readers, if it's not already clear, so that readers will understand what the related question isn't a duplicate.