You will try to work in a place where a large number of the important conversations happen right in front of you in a language you don't understand. This is probably the weakest business situation you will ever put yourself in. You rely on someone to tell you what was discussed or decided, and you have to believe that. That is a very strong position for the person doing the translation. You are entering into something where husbands and wives rip each other off, brothers to brothers, Turkish, British it doesn't matter one jot. Ask any Turkish hotelier - they can't go out for fear of fingers in the till, and your own staff's ways of scamming you are quite ingenious. You will enter a market that is already way overpopulated and you will struggle. If by some freak of nature you do well, your competitors will smile and wave and then report you for anything and everything. This can shut your special event down early one evening, shut you down for a week or ultimately have you taken to Dalaman and put on a plane, all courtesy of a free one way ticket. You can't return to get your possessions or sell your business. That's the main disadvantage, you aren't allowed to work there and if enough people report you, it has to be true - even if it isn't. Like Baz I also expect several members to follow after me and reply in similar fashion.
I rate your chances at nil, but because I am negative it doesn't mean that the forum is not here to help people. Your comment above is very strange. If you want positive comments only I'm sorry - we tend to deal in the truth here.
Good luck though!