The push for a Tasmanian A-League team is gaining high-powered support, with independent Denison MP Andrew Wilkie meeting Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull on Wednesday to discuss the proposal.Wilkie is seeking federal government funds for a redevelopment of North Hobart Oval, where the new club would be based.Mr Turnbull will consider the matter, according to a statement released by Wilkie, who said he would continue to look for opportunities to champion Tasmanias A-League bid at a federal level.I see the main way in which the Commonwealth could assist the bid is by providing funding for the redevelopment of the North Hobart Oval, which would become the home of the new club, Wilkie told AAP.Its currently used for Aussie Rules and my understanding is that it would remain a multi-use oval.Football Federation Australia is currently drawing up a set of criteria for A-League expansion bids, which will be released early next year.However, Tasmania has emerged as an unlikely early frontrunner.Former Melbourne Victory shareholders Robert Belteky and Harry Stamoulis are the money men behind the bid and believe a Tasmanian team can attract crowds of between 8000 and 10,000 every week.They believe the team can be ready for next season and have committed to securing at least one marquee player.Games would be split between Hobarts Blundstone Arena and Launcestons Aurora Stadium, presumably until North Hobart Oval is redeveloped.Tasmanias only current national sporting representation is in cricket, through the states Sheffield Shield team and Big Bash League franchise Hobart Hurricanes.The passion for football in Tasmania is severely underestimated by people who havent spent the time there, Belteky told SEN Radios World of Football program.We think we offer a lot more to the game than just bringing football to Tasmania, we believe it would also add to the game holistically and overall.Belteky also believes contrary to popular opinion, a Tasmanian team would actually be a boon for broadcasters.Our view is a state of 500,000 people that have had no access to supporting their own football club, the take-up on Fox Sports subscriptions would be huge, he said.We think that would add a lot to the game financially as well. 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RIO DE JANEIRO -- Nothing is ever easy for the rival Koreas, even that most ubiquitous and usually innocent of Olympic interactions, the selfie.Like dozens of athletes at the Rio Games, gymnasts Hong Un Jong of North Korea and Lee Eun-ju of South Korea met on the sidelines during competition and training.The 17-year-old Lee, who is at her first Olympics, posed Thursday for a smiling selfie with Hong, a 27-year-old veteran. That friendly encounter and others between the two were captured by journalists -- and immediately took on larger significance for two countries still technically at war.Such meetings are not illegal in South Korea, but they are complicated by the two countries long history of animosity and bloodshed.Hong became the first female gymnast from North Korea to win a gold medal in 2008, when Lee was 9 and living in her native Japan. Lee moved to South Korea in 2013 because her Korean father wanted her to learn more about the countrys culture.A few days after the selfie was taken, Lee and Hong met again Sunday while on the floor at the same time during preliminary competition. Lee was eliminated, while Hong will compete in the vault final.IOC President Thomas Bach described the Koreans selfie as a great gesture.Fortunately, we see quite a few of these gestures here during the Olympic games, Bach said Tuesday.Photos of their warm moments delighted many South Koreans and provided a rare note of concord in otherwise abysmal relations between the rivals. It is unclear if the gymnasts interaction was seen in the North, an authoritarian state with extremely limited press freedom and where access to outside media is usually blocked.The Korean Peninsula is still technically in a state of war because there has been no peace treaty signed to officially end the 1950-53 Korean War. Nearly 30,000 U.S. troops are stationed in South Korea as a deterrent against North Korea, and the neighbors regularly trade insults and warnings of war, including recent threats from the North of missile strikes on Seoul and its ally, Washington.A web of laws, most left over from the days when the South was ruled by a dictatorship, govern how South Koreans are supposed to interact with North Koreans. Travel and communication are severely restricted; even praising the North is illegal in the South.South Koreans are required by law to obtain government permission for any planned meeting, communication or other contact with North Koreans.ddddddddddddThis requirement is waived for spontaneous interactions with North Koreans that can happen during foreign travel, like the Olympics. But South Koreans must still provide an account of what happened to the South Korean Unification Ministry, which handles inter-Korean issues, within seven days, according to the ministry.So while its OK for South Korean athletes to talk to the North Koreans they meet at the Olympics, they must later submit reports about the encounters to their Olympic committee, which will then pass the information to the government.These brief, friendly moments between North and South Korean athletes at the Olympics may not seem to be a big deal to outsiders, but they often stimulate deep emotions on the Korean Peninsula, which has been divided by the worlds most heavily armed border for decades and where many long for eventual reunification.Inter-Korean ties, never good, have been terrible in the past decade of conservative rule in the South. But there were friendlier days under previous liberal governments in Seoul, and they were often seen most clearly in sports. North and South Koreans, for instance, marched together under a flag that symbolized unification during the 2000 Sydney Olympics.Whatever happens in politics, many South Koreans love seeing their athletes treating North Korean competitors with respect, and theres always lots of media attention on these moments of harmony. North Korea also cherishes the idea of unification, and much of its propaganda is aimed at stirring such feelings in the South, though the Norths vision is of a single Korea controlled by Pyongyang.When North Koreas womens soccer team won gold at the 2014 Asian Games in Incheon, South Korea, and the South won bronze, many South Koreans expressed delight in seeing players from both countries celebrate together after the medal ceremony, smiling and putting their arms around each other.Similarly, the Rio Olympic selfies represent a small thaw in otherwise frigid ties -- just as long as its all reported to the authorities.---AP writer Kim Tong-hyung contributed to this story from Seoul, South Korea.---Follow Foster Klug, APs Seoul bureau chief, at www.twitter.com/apklug ' ' '