Iraqi special forces have pushed into a new district in Mosul near the Tigris river and battled Islamic State militants there, bringing them closer to recapturing the east of the city.
The clashes took place in the Shurta district on Monday, a Reuters correspondent near the frontlines in Mosul said.
A spokesman for Iraq's elite Counter Terrorism Service said the militants were fighting back.
"We've begun breaching (the area) but there was an attack a few moments ago. By the end of the day we'll make some progress," spokesman Sabah al-Numan told Reuters.
Shurta lies towards the eastern bank of the Tigris, which Iraqi forces say they will soon fully control.
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They have already taken areas of the river bank further south.
Once the east bank is recaptured, they can begin attacks on western Mosul, which Islamic State still holds.
Iraqi forces have seized most of eastern Mosul in a three-month US-backed campaign to drive the militants out of the city, their last major Iraqi stronghold.
The Tigris bisects Mosul from north to south.
Fighting has intensified since the turn of the year as Iraqi forces launched a renewed push against the ultra-hardline militants.
Troops had got bogged down in late November and December after entering the city as IS fighters fought back with car bombs and snipers, and hid among a civilian population of up to 1.5 million.
The United Nations said a further 32,000 Mosul residents had fled the city in just more than two weeks, bringing the total number of people made homeless in the campaign to retake Mosul to 161,000.
The Mosul offensive, supported by U.S. coalition air power, involves 100,000-strong combined forces of Iraqi troops, Kurdish peshmerga fighters and Shi'ite militias.
