Frame challenge:
What if we reversed this question to ask if we should close as duplicates any questions on the English SO site if an answer can be found on another site, such as Russian, Chinese or Spanish. How helpful would that be to those who only speak English?
Would a search engine be able to even find that question or answer? I understand the link from the duplicate would be a way to find the dupe target, but I find answers (and questions) more by direct link from a search engine than through a dupe link. (I'm even assuming that many of the questions I reference are dupe targets.)
Would a translation engine be able to convert it and the code effectively enough for people to actually understand it? With the way I've seen even popular online translation engine work, they don't always work well for technical stuff, especially coding examples. Trying to navigate the difference in sentence structure just adds mental overhead to something that may already be at someone's mental capacity for a topic. Even with 10 years of professional experience in C# and other programming languages, I sometimes have trouble understanding the concepts in some of the English SO answers, and that's my native language.
If we close as duplicates any questions that are already on the English SO site, what real value do the other languages sites have? I haven't looked at them, but I'd have to assume that none of them have nearly as many questions as the English site does. Then, if we start closing those questions and point to the English site, how many novel questions are left on those sites? Are there enough to justify those sites existing, especially if the majority of them are just duplicates? If you continue down this route, you end up shutting down those sites and have just the English only SO site, which doesn't serve everyone as English isn't a universal language that's taught to everyone. And when you consider that, SO would become a very obviously biased site that excludes many people from around the world and would become a target for even more accusations of discrimination than it already is.