This old question has come up again, this time sparked by a heaping pile of flags in a room dedicated to Gujarati Android developers. But the question isn't new; two years ago, this was the lament:
This isn't one of our language Q&A sites. We don't allow anything other than English on the main site, we shouldn't allow it in chat.
Which makes some sense. Chat Stack Exchange has hundreds of moderators and high-rep users who read and understand myriad languages; Chat Stack Overflow does not, because Stack Overflow the main site is still English-only. When there's a problem in a Russian-language chatroom on Chat Stack Exchange, it's usually possible to find someone who is able to understand the situation and deal with it appropriately - it may take a little bit of time, but flags aren't gonna sit unhandled for days, or worse be ignored completely... But both of these things can and have happened in non-English rooms on Chat Stack Overflow.
For the past 4 years, I've taken a rather laissez faire approach here; if a room isn't causing problems, let it be... Only when it starts to cause problems, shut it down. Unfortunately, this just creates a situation where folks have wildly differing expectations of what is considered appropriate; sooner or later, folks are gonna feel like they've had the rug yanked out from beneath their feet. If this sounds a lot like the general problem of moderation in chat, that's because it is - the only difference is that while for years we mostly didn't moderate English chatrooms because the loudest chatters made a huge ugly stink about it, we've avoided moderating non-English chat because we can't. So our only choice has been to either not moderate or not host the chatrooms at all.
...But what if it wasn't?
The Stack Overflow approach to moderation has always been to divide the cost among everyone who participates. If everyone accepts that the price to be part of a well-run site is to participate in running it, then no one has to play Atlas. The solution to moderating English chatrooms isn't more moderators stomping on chatters with hobnailed boots; it's the chatters themselves being willing to take responsibility for their own actions and encourage their peers to do the same... Why shouldn't this also be true for non-English chatrooms?
Why we might want this?
Well, the #1 reason is that folks are doing it anyway. Saying "English-only" two years ago didn't accomplish much beyond providing us with a fig leaf; I don't expect it to do more now. Also, folks appear to be blaming the British, and while it probably is their fault in some way, I don't feel comfortable letting them take all the blame here.
But beyond that... It's good for the site. The real Stack Overflow, where y'all ask and answer programming questions. No one likes seeing piles of unclear questions in machine-translated English, but that's what we get... Unless we have a way for folks to get some advice and mentoring elsewhere. Some chatrooms already exist to help folks learn how to express problems or ideas in English, rooms where folks are able to express themselves in their native language, to ask questions in their native language, while others - those with more experience and often a better command of English - endeavor to assist them. This generally results in the person asking a better question on the main site than they would have, or possibly avoiding the question entirely through carefully thinking about what they want to ask (i.e. rubber ducking). Just as localized sites were created to tear down some barriers that were keeping people from participating, chatrooms could offer a bridge between those who want to participate but can't and those who want to help them but aren't allowed.
What would it take?
...But just as with non-English Q&A sites, non-English chatrooms would need a healthy group of people who can act as liaisons between those who can't communicate in English and the rest of the site. Folks who can understand and relay the goals of Stack Overflow and the philosophies of chat, who can resolve or escalate disputes, who can represent the room when conflict arises.
And this is where we've always gotten stuck! The moderators on SO tried to set up a system for this a few years back, but finding folks who were both involved in the relevant chatrooms and able to communicate with the moderators was difficult, especially with the proliferation of chatrooms at the time. Realistically, we probably need to do this more like Area51: get folks to commit to the role before the chatroom is created, not after it's already causing problems.
Which is why I'm asking y'all now, is anyone interested in pursuing this idea? Are there groups willing to act as liaisons for a room in their language on Chat Stack Overflow, and if so is this something we should pursue?