UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon is to visit North Korea's capital Pyongyang this week, according to reports from South Korea's Yonhap news agency.
The rumoured visit has not yet been confirmed by the United Nations or the South Korean government.
The report quoted an unnamed UN source, who expected Mr Ban would meet North Korean leader Kim Jong Un in what could mark a rare diplomatic opening by the isolated state.
"It is impossible that the UN Secretary-General will not meet the leader of North Korea, a UN member state, as he visits the country," the source told Yonhap, adding that the trip would likely provide significant momentum to resolve issues on the Korean Peninsula.
Mr Ban, who is South Korean, had made plans to visit an industrial park in the North operated jointly by the two Koreas earlier this year, but the North retracted approval for the trip at the last minute without explanation.
The UN spokesman's office said in a statement that it had no comment on the reported visit to Pyongyang.
The statement said Mr Ban has always declared his readiness to help enhance dialogue and peace on the Korean peninsula.
The secretive North, officially named the Democratic People's Republic of Korea, is under heavy UN, EU and US sanctions for its missile and nuclear tests.
South Korea's foreign ministry could not confirm the Yonhap report. Its Unification Ministry said Mr Ban has not contacted the South Korean government about any plan to visit the North.
If the visit does take place, analysts expect Mr Ban to raise the issues of sanctions and the North's suspected nuclear arms programme.
"The key point of discussion will have to be the UN sanctions on the North's weapons of mass destruction programme," said Yoo Ho-yeol, an expert on the North at Korea University near Seoul.
"The message by the North may be that it is willing to be flexible on the issue," he said.
"It is a positive opportunity for the North to showcase its leader Kim Jong Un appearing with a world figure as a national leader," Mr Yoo said.
In December last year, the UN General Assembly urged the Security Council to consider referring the North to the International Criminal Court after a UN inquiry detailed wide-ranging abuses in the country comparable to Nazi-era atrocities.
Two serving UN chiefs have visited the North previously. Kurt Waldheim visited the North Korean capital of Pyongyang in 1979 and again in 1981. Boutros Boutros-Ghali visited in 1993.
Mr Ban served as South Korea's foreign minister from 2004 to 2006, a period of intense multinational negotiations aimed at ending the North's nuclear programme.
Those talks led to a 2005 deal that later fell apart.
Forging a breakthrough with North Korea would be a signature achievement for Mr Ban, whose second five-year term at the helm of the UN finishes at the end of 2016.
Mr Ban has been mentioned in South Korean media and public opinion polls as a potential candidate in the presidential election scheduled in 2017, but has denied any intention to run.
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