Video report by ITV News Correspondent Juliet Bremner

Ten people will be fitted with "bionic eye" implants, paid for by the NHS, in a bid to cure their inherited blindness.

Five patients with a condition known as retinitis pigmentosa will be treated at the Manchester Royal Eye Hospital and five at Moorfields Eye Hospital in London next year.

They will be given a pair of glasses mounted with a camera which captures light and sends wireless signals to an implant in the retina.

The implant will then relay information to the brain to help patients regain some sight.

Professor Paulo Stanga, from Manchester Royal Eye Hospital, said: I'm delighted that our pioneering research has provided the evidence to support NHS England's decision to fund the bionic eye for the first time for patients.

"It surpassed all of our expectations when we realised that one of the retinitis pigmentosa patients in Manchester using the bionic eye could identify large letters for the first time in his adult life."

The procedure will funded by NHS England as part of a scheme that assesses treatments showing promise for the future.

Patients will be monitored for one year to see how the implant improves their lives.

Keith says he can see the twinkly Christmas lights. Credit: ITV News

Keith Hayman, from Lancashire, was one of the first to have the bionic eye implant fitted during a trial at the Manchester Eye Hospital in 2009.

The 68-year-old, who was diagnosed with retinitis pigmentosa in his twenties, was forced to retire as a butcher in 1981 when he became blind.

He said: "Having spent half my life in darkness, I can now tell when my grandchildren run towards me and make out lights twinkling on Christmas trees.

"When I used to go to the pub, I would be talking to a friend, who might have walked off and I couldn't tell and kept talking to myself.

"This doesn't happen any more because I can tell when they have gone. These little things make all the difference to me."

Dr Jonathan Fielden, director of specialised commissioning at NHS England said the procedure showed "real promise".