The law is not on the RCMP's side. I've read the three hasselwander decisions very closely, its very clear to me that the type 97, unless there is something completely amiss will not meet the criteria of the test established by the trial judge and affirmed by the supreme court.
That test would reclassify a firearm that was semi-automatic as a prohibited firearm if it could be converted full automatic:
1) in a 'reasonable' amount of time (there is significant case law on this point, mostly dealing with deactivated firearms, in those cases, the transition to a working firearm in less than 15 minutes).
2) with parts that are readily available (in hasselwander the firearm could be made to fire full automatic with an FA trigger group available by mail order and at gunshows within 100 km of where hasselwander lived [in Ontario], or a trigger group from a replica firearm that was widely available would also make the firearm full auto).
3) By someone of reasonable skill (ie. not working in the RCMP Firearms section or a gunsmith).
If that's the test, I think they lose in court.