SO lets tell all the dealers that are selling tracers oh And how did NrCan let the tracers in in the first place? If they were let in that means they were on the approved list. I might be wrong but if its not on the list you can't import it.
You are correct that if it is not on the List of Authorized Explosives it may not be imported, or sold, or possessed. You will not find any tracer ammunition on the list. They were initially imported because someone did not know the law, made a mistake, and now has a large pile of ammunition they cannot legally sell.
There are no dealers selling tracers in the EE. There are some individuals and they are in the wrong too simply because this is not widely known. The Czech 7.62x39 tracers that were imported a while back were ALL pulled from public sale, and at the time (a year ago) I was in Ottawa for a meeting with NRCan and volunteered to ask why this was the case. What I have explained so far in this thread is what I was told by senior explosives inspectors from NRCan. Doesn't get much more horse's mouth than that.
You are right tracers are not "safety cartridge" but that does not make them illegal. It just means that they are not Division 1 Class 6 in the NARCAN regs. What it is classed as I don't know.
Absolutely it makes them illegal, because
by default you are prohibited from possessing anything besides safety cartridges (or any explosive, for that matter, unless the Explosives Act/Regulations make an exception).
http://laws.justice.gc.ca/eng/E-17/FullText.html
Explosives Act
E-17
An Act respecting the manufacture, testing, sale, storage, transportation and importation of explosives and the use of fireworks
PROHIBITED ACTIVITIES
Manufacture, use, etc.
6. Except as authorized under this Act and subject to such exemptions as may be provided by regulation, no person shall
(a) make or manufacture explosives either wholly or in part except in a licensed factory;
(b) sell any authorized explosive unless that person is the operator of a licensed factory or licensed magazine and is authorized to sell explosives;
(c) store any explosive in a magazine that is not a licensed magazine;
(d) have in his possession any explosive; or
(e) carry on, except in a licensed factory, any of the following processes, namely,
(i) dividing into its component parts, or otherwise breaking up or unmaking, any explosive,
(ii) making fit for use any damaged explosive, or
(iii) remaking, altering or repairing any explosive.
I don't know who the hell Jean-Luc Arpin is or which end of the horse we're talking about (although if he's connected to the Government, I have an idea it's the far end)...but if he's right, there's an awful lot of high volume dealers breaking the law in Canada.
Exactly which high-volume dealers are selling tracers? I see none.
Jean-Luc Arpin is the national manager of Licensing, Compliance and Authorization at the Explosives Regulatory Division, Natural Resources Canada, Ottawa. I would venture to say he knows enough about the Explosives Act to take seriously what he tells me.
I just got off the phone with him and have asked for an email about this. I'll have it tomorrow and will post it here.