At least nine cooperative consumer societies out of 50 in the oil-rich Gulf state published announcements in the local media today saying they have taken Iranian products off their shelves in protest at Tehran's backing of President Bashar al-Assad.
Cooperative societies control a majority of the retail consumer market in Kuwait.
One of the announcements said that the next step in the campaign would be to dismiss Iranian labourers working at the societies and cancel their residency permits.
Meanwhile, dozens of Islamist activists demonstrated outside the Lebanese embassy late yesterday in protest at the military intervention of Shiite Hezbollah fighters on the side of Syrian regime forces against rebels.
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Protesters burned posters of Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah.
Sunni Muslims, who form more than 70 percent of the 1.2 million Kuwaitis, have been angered by the Syrian government onslaught on fellow Sunni rebels and the support Assad has received from Iran and Hezbollah.
Sunni clerics have launched fund-raising campaigns on the Internet and through mosques to aid the Syrian people as well as the rebellion.
The Gulf Cooperation Council states said on Monday they will take measures against members of Hezbollah.
The measures will affect their "residency permits, and financial and commercial transactions," said a GCC statement, citing a ministerial council decision.
The GCC includes Bahrain, Kuwait, Oman, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and the United Arab Emirates.