This is an exclusion again to the prohibitions in clause 6 and the offences in clause 17. So it applies to whoever is found in possession of one of these things. It doesn't deal with Canada's deactivation; it just allows for the technical deactivation of something that is a keepsake, for example. We have issues in this country with war trophies being brought home, and that sort of thing. One of the possibilities here is that one of the more likely prosecutions in this is not somebody opening an illicit cluster munitions factory in Toronto. It's a peacekeeper or NGO worker or somebody bringing one of these things home that may not have been deactivated to a satisfactory standard. So we had to cover off all of those possibilities.
The deactivation standard allows a forensic expert to testify in a criminal court that what the accused was found in possession of was not a cluster munition because it met the deactivation standard. Again, that's the practice, most commonly, with firearms. It applies to a lot of other weapons in Canadian law. So there's a lot of case law about what cannot readily be reactivated or restored. It means that the prosecution could rely on it, if it's prosecuted.