This article enthralled me by the description of Tibet.. and I was surprised to see "Shugden Gompa" mentioned, though nothing else about Shugden and the practice.
http://gulfnews.com/life-style/travel/seeking-out-peaks-and-petals-in-tibet-1.921251I then searched for more info about the Shugden Gompa, which is near Rawu, and found this pdf (
http://bit.ly/v4WzSf) which said:
"Between the Tributaries of the Lohit River and the Salween
There are a number of peaks in this divide, among them Chombo (6700m)30, a twin-headed mountain which is south and west of the Ata Kang La and may be the highest peak east of the bend of the Tsangpo. There appear to be a number of summits of around 6000m clustered around Shugden Gompa. The Ata
glacier which rises north of Chombo is about 20km long and is possibly the largest glacier east of the Tsangpo, according to Kingdon-Ward. There are several other glaciers, 10 to 13km in length.
and
http://www.himalayanclub.org/journal/tsangpo-the-final-exploration/ which also mentions:
"He found Kinthup’s topographical descriptions accurate except that the waterfall was on a side stream and not on the Tsangpo. They travelled upstream along the Zayul river (the Lohit in Assam) and by late June reached Shugden gompa (monastery). He discovered that a river not far to north from here, the Nugong Asi chu, ran into the Tsangpo."
So far i have not found any elaboration on this Shugden Gompa. If anyone else has some info to share, I'd love to hear about it.