No, they do not. None of the recent Rigols do. For the most part, the current generation of econo-performance scopes have dropped this capability.
That said, if you look at the sampling rate on the MSO 2000A series scopes, their sampling rate does exceed the analog front-end bandwidth, so it appears there'd be no value in doing equivalent-time sampling on that series. (Unless I am totally misunderstanding ETS, it aims to allow a slower sampling rate to get the most out of a high-bandwidth analog front-end.)
Unfortunately there is a circumstance where this does matter.
If the input signal contains components which are close to but still
below the Nyquist bandwidth, then non-linearity and aperture jitter from the digitizer will mix with them producing sidebands
above the Nyquist bandwidth and aliasing will have occurred. The result is commonly visible on fast edges or high frequency sine waves where each acquisition "wobbulates" in amplitude and time. On a DPO, the signal looks smeared in amplitude and time which might be taken for jitter and noise which it is but it is jitter and noise from the digitizer and not the signal. Sin(x)/x reconstruction makes it look even worse.
Equivalent time sampling ameliorates this problem by simply allowing much higher sample rates raising the Nyquist bandwidth.
Agilent has an application note discussing this among other things:
http://cp.literature.agilent.com/litweb/pdf/5989-5732EN.pdfSince running across this issue, I have wanted to test an oscilloscope that uses digital triggering to see how it behaves under these circumstances but I have not had the chance. I suspect that triggering on the signal after aliasing will make the problem even worse.
For reference, 2 GS/sec (on the MSO2000A series) = approximately 800MHz effective digital stage bandwidth, as per your linked article.
The problem occurs even with signals that only contain frequencies below the Nyquist bandwidth.
Next time I have the opportunity to evaluate a modern DSO, I will test it specifically for this which is easy enough with a fast transition time pulse generator.