There are both CAs and FAs around of the SMG C1 in private hands in Canada. That online registry from the Ottawa Citizen listed about a dozen or so. It was hard to tell exactly because they were registered a multitude of different ways, since most were not verified but merely transferred over from the old green slip system.
I can only possess the dewats unfortunately, and as a result, I have bought several live, had them transferred to smiths and then they were deactivated. Others I bought as dewats, one from collectors source and one from a private sale (ex DCRA gun)
Here are some shots from photobucket of my Cdn FNs:
This is the corner of my gun room where the FN era stuff sits. In the cabinet now sits 2 FNC1A1s, A FNC2A1, a EX1 CDN, and a SMG C1. All are neutered. I also have a C1A1 presently live with a friend who is licensed for 12.5. It is likely going to be neutered when I get home. Problem is that I have a number of accessories (early NV scope, Later night vision scope, Elcan sniper scope etc ) that need rifles to display them on. My apologies to the guys who can still own them alive, but I am usually willing to pay the price to buy them for deactivation. My apologies also for all the junk blocking the cabinet. This room seems to have been getting progressively smaller in the last couple of years.
The above rifle was listed on the sales invoice shown in Blake Steven's early FAL book. It was interesting in that it had the early style of front sight block on a very late 8L rifle. This rifle was very close to the end of C1A1 production, possibly only 3 or 4 from the end.
The above rifle was from Dave Tomlinson's collection. It is one of the EX1 trials rifles. After the C1A1s were adopted, they remained in CF inventory as cadet drill rifles and for issue to the airborne school as jump rifles.
The above photos are of another C1A1 (ex-OPP) and my C2A1 (bought live F/A from the EE as an estate gun).
I thought I had a photo of my C1 SMG, but it turned out they were photos of the police carbine, so no point putting that on here.
The LCMM in charge of all these small arms told me that 300 of each type were retained for museum and study purposes. The remainder all went for the hot red bath.