Hans, Hans, Hans.
Yes. Put a stop to this.
But first, please consider this question: Why are you writing in a language that is not your own? Why not write in your native language, and stay there?
Someone above says (with misplaced sympathy) that "some people are just biased against non-native English speakers." That's nonsense. Pure nonsensical virtue-signalling balderdash. IGNORE IT. This isn't a matter of fairness. "Bias" (whatever the bleep that means these days) doesn't enter into it. I happen to be a native English speaker. I don't force myself to read Korean, for sake of fairness. I don't struggle through Cyrillic, to virtue signal. English is my native language. I write and speak English. When reading, I expect the material to be correct. That doesn't make me a xenophobe. It's sensible. It's utilitarian. Language is utilitarian. I'm right-handed. I don't handicap myself, by writing with my left hand. English is my language. I don't handicap myself, by trying to write in Spanish.
Back to you, Hans. Write in your language. Write for readers in your language.
What? Too small an audience? Too many illiterates in your neck of the woods? Change that. Promote literacy. Mark Twain had precious few English readers here in post-Colonial America. He didn't move to Europe. He stayed here. He wrote here. He promoted literacy. He opened his own publishing house and sold his books door to door.
You can be the next Mark Twain. For your language.
The downside? You lose ten or eleven readers on Scribblehub and Royal Road. The upside? Who knows. People have won the Nobel Prize in Literature for promoting native language literacy. Did Gabriel Garcia Marquez write in English? No. Isabel Allende? No. Octavio Paz? No. Pablo Neruda? No. They were all translated to English. After they won the Nobel Prize.
Write in your language. For your readers. And if you have no readers, make some.