I do understand that on a daily basis people realize that there are in fact other scripts besides Latin, and that numbers in those scripts can be expressed through other glyphs than 0-9, and that their mind is blown, resulting in an upvote on the question. Working with text is a fascinating aspect of programming.
But what on earth happened to that question? I saw it come by in the newsletter as well. I guess it's just as random as getting a post to the Reddit frontpage: it doesn't matter if it's the umpteenth repost of the same picture, if you hit the timing just right, it'll yield you so much sweet karma.
It is however the umpteenth version of "Why are these weird characters considered to be numbers in my [language|framework]?", and the answer is always the same: because the Unicode Consortium determined them to be (as long as there isn't a bug in the implementation).
So while the "off-topic: general computing hardware and software" close-votes are beyond ridiculous, I'm pretty sure there are quite a bit of duplicates that apply, given it's a language-agnostic problem, meaning duplicate votes with a proper duplicate target are correct.
It doesn't matter that the question was featured in the newsletter, viewed by thousands and voted on by hundreds: it should have been closed as a duplicate even before reaching that point, and we shouldn't hesitate to close it after that.
That being said, if it is in fact a better duplicate target than its predecessors, we could invert it: close the older ones as a duplicate of the newer one. Note that the voting, especially through the Hot Network Questions and Newsletter exposure, does not indicate quality, and I'm going to refrain from choosing which is the better one in this answer.