Immigration department spokesman said no decision had been made on visa

Tyler the Creator tweeted he has been banned despite upcoming bookings

American rapper Tyler the Creator has claimed he's been banned from Australia - and he blames a feminist group that accuses him of hating women.

But a spokesperson from the Department of Immigration and Border Protection denied the claim to Daily Mail Australia.

‘The Department can confirm that Mr Okonma has a current visa application with the Department, and that no decision has yet been made,’ the spokesperson said.

24-year-old rapper Tyler Okonma, known as Tyler the Creator, claimed on Tuesday morning that his visa was denied following a feminist campaign

Mr Okonma is booked for an all-ages nation-wide tour in September, and feminist group Collective Shout have campaigned that he should be denied a visa

Coralie Alison told Daily Mail Australia that she has 'received a lot of abuse this morning' which has been 'particularly aggressive' from Tyler the Creator fans

Tyler Okonma took to Twitter in the early hours of Tuesday morning, alleging that feminist group Collective Shout had successfully campaigned Immigration Minister Peter Dutton to deny the musician entry ahead of his all-ages Australian tour in September.

In a post on the social media site, Mr Okonma tagged Coralie Alison, the Director of Operations at Collective Shout.

‘T IS NOW BANNED FROM AUSTRALIA, YOU WON @CoralieAlison,’ the 24-year-old wrote to his 2.48 million followers.

The post has been retweeted 3,000 times and has been ‘favourited’ by 4,700 users.

‘I have received a lot of abuse this morning,’ Ms Alison told Daily Mail Australia.

‘As activists we are used to receiving abuse. But abuse from Tyler’s fans is particularly aggressive.

‘I can’t keep up with the tweets,’ she said.

‘I have a thick skin so I don’t let it get to me, however it does raise concerns when those that listen to Tyler’s music go on to make death threats.

‘I draw a correlation,’ she said.

One Twitter user has claimed to have found her address.

One Twitter user has claimed to know Ms Alison's address. Another has said, 'I'm coming to kill you'

‘It would be like a very horrible but slightly pleasing accident if someone was to hit @CoralieAlison with a car going maybe 70mph,’ one Twitter user wrote.

Another said, 'I'm coming to kill you', and another demanded she 'get back to the kitchen'.

‘One fan wrote “I hope she dies” on a photo of my niece on Instagram,’ Ms Alison said. ‘They try to make it personal.’

Coralie Alison has made her Instagram account private following the abuse, and said she had not yet reported the comments to police when Daily Mail Australia spoke with her on Tuesday morning.

‘There have been some messages of support as well,’ she said.

'There have been messages of support as well', the Director of Operations at Collective Shout said, following Tyler the Creator's accusation that she has had him banned from Australia

'I can't keep up with the tweets,' Ms Alison said, after Tyler the Creator tagged her in a tweet claiming he has been banned from Australia

Feminist group Collective Shout campaigned Mr Dutton to have Mr Okonma denied entrance to Australia.

A spokesperson from the Department of Immigration and Border Protection told Daily Mail Australia that ‘the Australian Government supports freedom of speech.

‘However, the exercise of this freedom involves a responsibility to avoid vilification of, inciting discord in, or representing a danger to, the Australian community,’ the spokesperson said.

‘In cases where a person is assessed as representing a risk that they may vilify or incite discord, or otherwise represent a danger to the Australian community, a person may be refused a visa.’

Tyler the Creator meets that criteria ‘based on the content of his song lyrics and his behaviour during his July 2013 tour,’ the letter from Collective Shout to Mr Dutton said.

In 2013, Sydney woman Talitha Stone reported that she had received torrents of threats from fans after Tyler the Creator incited violence against her online and at his Sydney all-ages concert, following a similar campaign from the same feminist collective.

Video footage from Tyler the Creator's all-ages Sydney show in 2013 shows the musician ranting onstage about Ms Stone.

'F***ing b****, I wish she could hear me call her a b****, too, f***ing w****. Yeah, I got a sold-out show right now b****. Hey, this f***ing song is dedicated to you, you f***ing c***.'

He also said he hoped Ms Stones's children 'get some messed up STDs'.

Another woman from Collective Shout, Melinda Tankard Reist, received threats last month after launching the campaign to ban Mr Okonma from Australia.

She received tweets from Twitter users who had edited her profile picture on a collage of photos made of Tyler, with the lyrics about rape published across the bottom.

The social media post was captioned 'What you gonna do now b***h you surrounded.'

'You express an opinion and you get threatened with rape,' she told Daily Mail Australia last month.

'It is upsetting but it is an attempt to silence us.'

Tyler the Creator songs include lines such as: 'You call this s*** rape but I think that rape’s fun, I just got one request, stop breathing' and 'I wanna tie her body up and throw her in my basement, Keep her there, so nobody can wonder where her face went.'

In January 2014, New Zealand Immigration denied Tyler the Creator entry to the country.

He is due to arrive in Australia on September 3 for an all-ages, national tour.

Melinda Tankard Reist, also from Collective Shout, received threats last month after launching the campaign to deny Tyler the Creator entry to Australia