China's President Xi Jinping is pictured during a welcoming ceremony at the Great Hall of the People, in Beijing, November 13, 2013. REUTERS/Jason Lee China defended the death penalty Thursday as a traditional deterrent, after a report said its annual executions had again far exceeded the rest of the world's combined.

Beijing judicially put to death thousands of people in 2013 compared to a total of 778 elsewhere, the campaign group Amnesty International said in its annual report. It did not give a specific figure for China as Beijing considers the statistic a state secret and does not release it.

But foreign ministry spokesman Hong Lei dismissed the study and highlighted policies to curb capital punishment.

"The relevant organization always has biased opinions against China," he said at a regular press briefing.

"Whether or not a country retains the death penalty is mainly based on the traditional culture and specific national conditions.

"It meets the aspirations of the Chinese public and will also help crack down on and prevent severe criminal activities," he said, adding that the practice also followed the country's "legal and cultural traditions".

Beijing was taking steps to "implement the policy of strictly controlling and prudently using death penalty", Hong said.

China has cut back on executions since ramping them up in the 1980s and 90s as a way to prevent crime amid the social upheavals that came with drastic economic reform.

A key reform in 2007 required the Supreme Court to review all death sentences.

The number of crimes eligible for capital punishment was cut from 68 to 55 in 2011, and in November Beijing pledged further cuts, without providing details.

Human Rights Watch in January estimated Chinese executions at "less than 4,000 in recent years", down from 10,000 annually a decade earlier.

The China-focused rights group Dui Hua put the total around 3,000 in 2012, down from 12,000 in 2002.