Several air strikes were also reported on the rebel-held second city of Mosul
Iraqi government forces are continuing an offensive to retake the northern city of Tikrit from Sunni rebels.
Aircraft have struck at rebel positions and clashes have broken out in various parts of the city, witnesses and officials have said.
Troops had reportedly pulled back to the nearby town of Dijla as Saturday's initial offensive met stiff resistance.
The city of Tikrit was captured by Sunni rebels on 11 June as they swept across large parts of northern Iraq.
"The security forces are advancing from different areas", Lt-Gen Qassem Atta told journalists. "There are ongoing clashes."
There was fighting in the northern Qadissiyah district, near the university where troops established a foothold in the city a few days ago, witnesses told the Associated Press.
An unnamed official also told the agency of clashes around an air base formerly used by the US military, Camp Speicher.
Improvised devices
Heavy fighting took place on Saturday between the Iraqi security forces and armed men from different factions controlling Tikrit, resulting in many casualties on both sides, eyewitnesses and journalists told the BBC.
The witnesses said the Iraqi forces had been hampered in their bid to retake Tikrit by the large number of improvised explosive devices laid on the approaches to the city.
But Lt-Gen Atta said that during Sunday's offensive many of the devices had been detonated.
Fear inside Tikrit
"We cannot live here another day. The entire night we have only heard bombs bursting all around the hospital" - Marina Jose, one of 46 stranded Indian nurses at a Tikrit teaching hospital, tells BBC
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