There has not been any policy change. What there has been is two new moderators minted.
A bit of background: The "very low quality" flag is universally panned because it's not clear how it should be used. In practice, some mods (like me) take a very liberal, broad approach to handling VLQ flags on questions, validating such flags as long as it is immediately obvious that (and how) the question should be closed. Other mods are far more restrictive in their willingness to validate VLQ flags on questions, preferring instead that you raise a more specific flag type that precisely indicates the problems with the question—or even preferring that you leave handling the problem entirely to the community, without involving a moderator, by using close votes and/or downvotes.
While there are certainly merits to both points of view, and I could argue convincingly for either (as I did in the above-linked answer), most of the arguments against a "liberal" handling of VLQ flags on questions come down to either (A) system-level objections (i.e., this type of flag shouldn't exist at all), or (B) moderator-workload concerns. I firmly believe that, even though both are true and valid objections, neither of these are the flagger's fault or concern, and thus should not be reasons to decline a flag.
Anyway, the compromise position—perhaps the one that all moderators would agree with, and thus the one situation in which you are "safe" using the VLQ flag—is to interpret the VLQ flag as requesting immediate deletion. In this view, the VLQ flag means something akin to: "While not irredeemably rude or abusive [for, if it were, I'd be raising a 'rude/abusive' flag], this post is inherently/fundamentally problematic and needs to be immediately deleted by a moderator."
Unfortunately, even the application of this interpretation brings us to a difference of opinion: does non-English content need to be immediately deleted? I thought this would have been an obvious "yes", but in discussing this privately with the moderator who declined your flag, I discovered that that is not a universally-held point of view. The moderator involved thought it was reasonable to simply close non-English questions, allowing them to be re-written in English. On that basis, and consistent with the policy they linked, your flag was declined because you should have voted to close the question (the exact closure reason isn't all that important), not raised a VLQ flag on it.
(The linked policy is clear on this; that I cannot argue with. I do object to declining flags on the basis of violating nitpicky guidance when they conform to common sense, and I also object to having a different view of the VLQ flag when it comes to answers as compared to questions, because I think that's just confusing and silly.)
Although I have convinced Henry not to decline such flags outright in the future, it's nearly impossible to guarantee that all 28 moderators interpret and handle flags in exactly the same way.
What I will do is attempt to reassure you that raising a VLQ flag on non-English content is not a crazy idea, and that having a flag declined due to a difference of opinion is not a big deal.
Going forward, I think it is reasonable that you handle non-English questions by voting to close them (even though I, personally, think it is equally reasonable to raise VLQ flags on them). If nothing else, this is "the course of least resistance". The good news is that we are planning to add a close reason specifically for non-English content. Hopefully, that'll make it more clear and more obvious what to do in situations like this.