Absolutely, and so do not another myriad of multimeters, unless these are brand new regulations.
I never said the 71 met its CAT rating by the way, just that I thought it would be unlikely that a big company like Uni-T would disregard these rules, when it wouldn't be that expensive to comply with them. That is why independent testing is so important, but few people worry about approval stamps on the back of the meters.
We certainly have learned a lot with that document, especially about the amps ranges, which do not require high voltage spikes testing.
The meters are still reasonably safe, if you make sure your leads are in the right positions and you don't connect to potentially low impedance high voltage circuits.
Just in case, I will install 30 kA HRC fuses in my meters, including a GDT on the Volts/Ohms range, since we can't trust the CAT rating on the Volts/Ohms ranges either. Not a garantee of safety, but better than nothing.