If the UK government wants its post-Brexit Trade Bill to become law, it has to deal with the genocide amendment “one way or the other,” former Tory leader Sir Iain Duncan Smith said on Thursday. The genocide amendment aims to stop bilateral trade with genocidal countries, and is the last remaining obstacle to the Trade Bill becoming law. The amendment is stuck between the House of Lords, which supports it, and the House of Commons, where the Tory government is struggling to whip its backbench MPs into rejecting it. Duncan Smith, one of the main proponents of the amendment in the Commons, told The Epoch Times on Thursday that the government won’t be able to block MPs from voting on the amendment like it did last time. The ministers “have to come back to the House of Commons if they want to get their Trade Bill, and their Trade Bill …