Priti Patel has been ordered back from Africa by the prime minister following controversy over her meetings with Israeli officials, the BBC understands.
BBC political editor Laura Kuenssberg said "some kind of development" was expected today and Ms Patel's sacking seemed "almost inevitable now".
Ms Patel apologised on Monday to the PM about unauthorised meetings with Israeli politicians in August.
But there are now questions about further meetings held in September.
BBC diplomatic correspondent James Landale said the international development secretary had cut short her official trip to Uganda to fly back to the UK. Although it is not yet confirmed, she was widely thought to be on a Kenya Airways flight which landed at Heathrow at 15:10 GM
It is thought Lord Polak, honorary president of the Conservative Friends of Israel, was present at both meetings.
Ms Patel met Israeli public security minister Gilad Erdan in Westminster on 7 September.
He later tweeted about their meeting.
On 18 September she met foreign ministry official Yuval Rotem in New York.
It is not yet clear whether Ms Patel had informed the prime minister about these meetings or of her plans to look into giving tax-payers' money to the Israeli military to treat wounded Syrian refugees in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights region - a request that was turned down as "inappropriate" by officials.
In a further development on Wednesday the Israeli Haaretz newspaper reported that during August she visited an Israeli military field hospital in the Golan Heights - the UK, like other members of the international community, has never recognised Israeli control of the area seized from Syria in the 1967 Six-Day War.
There was no immediate comment from the Department for International Development on the report.
BBC political editor Laura Kuenssberg said that "revelations about more extra curricular meetings" mean that "if May doesn't sack her now it's an ongoing sore that smacks of weakness".
Ms Patel was forced to correct the record earlier this week about the number of meetings that she had attended and when the Foreign Office had been notified about them.
The MP said she had been wrong to suggest to the Guardian that Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson knew of the trip in advance when he had only learnt about it while it was under way.
In the Commons on Tuesday, Foreign Office minister Alistair Burt - who was in Israel on official business at the same time as Ms Patel's unofficial visit in August - said that Downing Street regarded the matter "as closed" after Ms Patel had been reprimanded by the prime minister and reminded of her obligations under the ministerial code.
Ms Patel, who has been an MP since 2010, is a long-standing supporter of Israel and a former vice-chairman of Conservative Friends of Israel.
Former Labour lord chancellor Lord Falconer told BBC Radio 4's Today: "She should not be colluding with a foreign government - it doesn't matter if it's an ally or not... to do it in that secretive way makes her look like she's much more the emissary of the Israeli government than a member of the British government."
Former Conservative international development minister Sir Desmond Swayne said that even if Ms Patel was forced to quit, just a week after Defence Secretary Sir Michael Fallon resigned for inappropriate behaviour, it would not be a "catastrophe".
"There are 22 Cabinet ministers and there are plenty of people who are talented to step into their shoes," he told BBC's Victoria Derbyshire. "It will not be a huge destabilisation."
Media captionConservative Crispin Blunt tells Today it would have been alright if Patel had told Foreign Office about meetings
In a letter to Mrs May, Labour's shadow Cabinet Office minister Jon Trickett called on the prime minister to either call in her independent adviser on ministerial standards to investigate, or "state publicly and explain your full reasons for why Priti Patel retains your confidence".
However, Conservative MP Nadhim Zahawi - a member of the parliamentary foreign affairs committee - told BBC Two's Newsnight that he believed some of the criticism facing Ms Patel was down to the fact she was a pro-Brexit campaigner during the EU referendum.
He said Ms Patel was not having "clandestine" meetings with "an enemy state" and that the Foreign Office was made aware of the meetings while she was in Israel.
BBC political editor Laura Kuenssberg said "some kind of development" was expected today and Ms Patel's sacking seemed "almost inevitable now".
Ms Patel apologised on Monday to the PM about unauthorised meetings with Israeli politicians in August.
But there are now questions about further meetings held in September.
BBC diplomatic correspondent James Landale said the international development secretary had cut short her official trip to Uganda to fly back to the UK. Although it is not yet confirmed, she was widely thought to be on a Kenya Airways flight which landed at Heathrow at 15:10 GM
It is thought Lord Polak, honorary president of the Conservative Friends of Israel, was present at both meetings.
Ms Patel met Israeli public security minister Gilad Erdan in Westminster on 7 September.
He later tweeted about their meeting.
On 18 September she met foreign ministry official Yuval Rotem in New York.
It is not yet clear whether Ms Patel had informed the prime minister about these meetings or of her plans to look into giving tax-payers' money to the Israeli military to treat wounded Syrian refugees in the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights region - a request that was turned down as "inappropriate" by officials.
In a further development on Wednesday the Israeli Haaretz newspaper reported that during August she visited an Israeli military field hospital in the Golan Heights - the UK, like other members of the international community, has never recognised Israeli control of the area seized from Syria in the 1967 Six-Day War.
There was no immediate comment from the Department for International Development on the report.
BBC political editor Laura Kuenssberg said that "revelations about more extra curricular meetings" mean that "if May doesn't sack her now it's an ongoing sore that smacks of weakness".
Ms Patel was forced to correct the record earlier this week about the number of meetings that she had attended and when the Foreign Office had been notified about them.
The MP said she had been wrong to suggest to the Guardian that Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson knew of the trip in advance when he had only learnt about it while it was under way.
In the Commons on Tuesday, Foreign Office minister Alistair Burt - who was in Israel on official business at the same time as Ms Patel's unofficial visit in August - said that Downing Street regarded the matter "as closed" after Ms Patel had been reprimanded by the prime minister and reminded of her obligations under the ministerial code.
Ms Patel, who has been an MP since 2010, is a long-standing supporter of Israel and a former vice-chairman of Conservative Friends of Israel.
Former Labour lord chancellor Lord Falconer told BBC Radio 4's Today: "She should not be colluding with a foreign government - it doesn't matter if it's an ally or not... to do it in that secretive way makes her look like she's much more the emissary of the Israeli government than a member of the British government."
Former Conservative international development minister Sir Desmond Swayne said that even if Ms Patel was forced to quit, just a week after Defence Secretary Sir Michael Fallon resigned for inappropriate behaviour, it would not be a "catastrophe".
"There are 22 Cabinet ministers and there are plenty of people who are talented to step into their shoes," he told BBC's Victoria Derbyshire. "It will not be a huge destabilisation."
Media captionConservative Crispin Blunt tells Today it would have been alright if Patel had told Foreign Office about meetings
In a letter to Mrs May, Labour's shadow Cabinet Office minister Jon Trickett called on the prime minister to either call in her independent adviser on ministerial standards to investigate, or "state publicly and explain your full reasons for why Priti Patel retains your confidence".
However, Conservative MP Nadhim Zahawi - a member of the parliamentary foreign affairs committee - told BBC Two's Newsnight that he believed some of the criticism facing Ms Patel was down to the fact she was a pro-Brexit campaigner during the EU referendum.
He said Ms Patel was not having "clandestine" meetings with "an enemy state" and that the Foreign Office was made aware of the meetings while she was in Israel.
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